I have been mulling this matter over for a while.
In a recent post on social media there was discussion taking place regarding cormorants which broadly split into 2 campsbetween
1) They have no place on our waters, eat all our fish and should be shot
Versus
2) They are a nuisance but humans have created this problem by overfishing the seas and they are an animal doing what comes naturally.
I have to admit that I fall into the latter camp.
Into this discussion stepped an individual who I am not going to name who claimed to be the author of a document (published?) and claimed the following 3 things:
A) There is no shortage of fish in our seas.
B) That cormorants are not naturally coastal birds but freshwater birds.
and most bizarrely
C) The RSPB and other "so called" conservation organisations are actively encouraging the spread of cormorants through British inland waters.
Having questioned myself as to whether I had entered a parallel universe/ Twighlight Zone. I responded by saying that I have been fishing in the sea since I was 7 and there is no doubt in my mind (and in published evidence) that fish stocks around Britain are drastically lower now than they were 50 years ago, that as a child I only ever saw cormorants in coastal areas and their presence in inland waters has, in my experience, occurred relatively recently (in the last 30 years or so) and I also asked him to detail the specific mechanism/s by which the RSPB was "actively encouraging cormorants to spread through our inland waters".
Perhaps unsurprisingly,but also exceedingly frustratingly, the individual concerned did not respond and I have seen no further posts from them.
I am interested to know what other users of BFW think about cormorants on our inland waters (add in goosanders, mergansers and any other fish-eating birds or mammals or even fish if you wish).
In a recent post on social media there was discussion taking place regarding cormorants which broadly split into 2 campsbetween
1) They have no place on our waters, eat all our fish and should be shot
Versus
2) They are a nuisance but humans have created this problem by overfishing the seas and they are an animal doing what comes naturally.
I have to admit that I fall into the latter camp.
Into this discussion stepped an individual who I am not going to name who claimed to be the author of a document (published?) and claimed the following 3 things:
A) There is no shortage of fish in our seas.
B) That cormorants are not naturally coastal birds but freshwater birds.
and most bizarrely
C) The RSPB and other "so called" conservation organisations are actively encouraging the spread of cormorants through British inland waters.
Having questioned myself as to whether I had entered a parallel universe/ Twighlight Zone. I responded by saying that I have been fishing in the sea since I was 7 and there is no doubt in my mind (and in published evidence) that fish stocks around Britain are drastically lower now than they were 50 years ago, that as a child I only ever saw cormorants in coastal areas and their presence in inland waters has, in my experience, occurred relatively recently (in the last 30 years or so) and I also asked him to detail the specific mechanism/s by which the RSPB was "actively encouraging cormorants to spread through our inland waters".
Perhaps unsurprisingly,but also exceedingly frustratingly, the individual concerned did not respond and I have seen no further posts from them.
I am interested to know what other users of BFW think about cormorants on our inland waters (add in goosanders, mergansers and any other fish-eating birds or mammals or even fish if you wish).