The Field

More chicks, less rhetoric

IT would be much easier if conservation could go back to being simple. Until the 1980s, it was generally assumed that wild-life could only thrive where it was protected from the hand of man — in nature reserves. As with so many simple solutions, it was wrong. The RSPB-led State of Nature reports are manifestations of this failure.

Nature reserves cannot possibly protect viable populations of a wide range of species in the long term, because they make up less than 2% of our countryside. Even if we add all the other designated conservation areas, such as Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs), much of which are still working farmland, it is not enough. To truly thrive in our working countryside, these species need to live alongside man.

Our approach to conservation in this country has undergone a revolution quietly. Successive governments have funded a

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Field

The Field1 min read
News In Brief
This year’s Eat Game Awards took place on board the Dixie Queen on the River Thames. Nine winners were crowned with Joe Mann, a cookery teacher from Taunton, Somerset, taking home the coveted Champion of Champions title for the work he is doing to ed
The Field1 min read
Introducing…
Ed Wills has been the deputy editor of The Field since 2021. He caught his first fish at the age of three, sparking a lifelong interest in the countryside and its pursuits. Aside from a deep passion for fishing, shooting and stalking, he is a great s
The Field7 min read
Spotting The Trout Of A Lifetime
AMID THE perennial noise about failing salmon numbers, untreated sewage, and river stocking, one group of gamefish seems to have gone unnoticed: our big, wild, native brown trout; glorious leopards of fish weighing three pounds at least but preferabl

Related Books & Audiobooks