Christian Tyroll
Senior Member
The otters at Symonds Yat seemed to wait till evening to come out but would swim right past you and didn’t mind being spotlighted with the headtorch. Like Graham said, as big as dogs as well.
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Sounds a nightmare. SSSI's as a designation and management tool seem to be failing horribly, mirroring the overall situation on conservation in England and Wales. Too much time worrying about beavers and otters and not enough addressing catastrophic insect decline and all the rest of it.
Agree with your point about SSSI's failing. Seems to be going from bad to worse. A crude policy instrument and a good example of the law of unintended consequences.
I must take issue with your last point. All the major conservation NGO's (GWCT, Rspb, WT's etc) have been banging the drum about habitat loss and insect declines for decades. The problem they have faced is that for the greater part of this time, Governments just haven't been interested in addressing these issues and have been wedded to agricultural and land use policies that have unintentionally acted as the catalyst for driving these declines.
In comparison relatively insignificant resources have been directed into species recovery programs specifically for otters (almost nothing), and more recently beavers. The latter btw have been found to significantly increase invertebrate life.