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Feral

Page 37

by George Monbiot


  61. Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, Turning the Tide.

  62. English Nature, 22 July 2005, ‘Lundy lobsters bounce back in UK’s first no-take zone’, press release.

  63. M. G. Hoskin et al, 2011, ‘Variable population responses by large decapod crustaceans to the establishment of a temperate marine no-take zone’, Canadian Journal of Fishers and Aquatic Sciences, vol. 68, pp. 185–200, doi: 10.1139/F10–143.

  64. Richard Black, 16 July 2008, ‘Fishing ban brings seas to life’, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/7508216.stm

  65. Roberts, Unnatural History of the Sea.

  66. Ibid.

  67. Van Lavieren, ‘Can no-take fishery reserves help protect our oceans?’

  68. Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, Turning the Tide.

  69. Ibid.

  70. Rupert Crilly and Aniol Esteban, 2012, ‘Jobs lost at sea: overfishing and the jobs that never were’, New Economics Foundation, http://neweconomics.org/sites/neweconomics.org/files/Jobs_Lost_at_Sea.pdf

  71. R. Watson and D. Pauly, 2001, ‘Systematic distortions in world fisheries catch trends’, Nature, vol. 414, pp. 534–6. Cited Roberts, in Unnatural History of the Sea.

  72. Mark Fisher, 2006, ‘No take zones–a maritime rewilding’, http://www.self-willed-land.org.uk/articles/no_take.htm

  73. Richard Benyon, 15 November 2011, Written Ministerial Statement on Marine Conservation Zones, http://www.defra.gov.uk/news/2011/11/15/wms-marine-conservation-zones/

  74. Jean-Luc Solandt, Marine Conservation Society, 12 March 2012, by email.

  75. Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 2010, Establishing Fisheries Management Measures to Protect Marine Conservation Zones, http://jnce.defra.gov.uk/PDF/MCZ_FisheriesManagementFactsheet.pdf

  76. Welsh Assembly Government, 2011, ‘Marine Conservation Zone Project, Wales’. Newsletter, 3. http://www.werh.org/documents/110927marinemcznewsletter3en.pdf

  77. Marine Conservation Society, 2010, ‘Welsh Assembly Government’s sea protection plans a “disgraceful let down”, says marine charity’, http://www.mcsuk.org/press/view/327

  78. Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 2012, ‘Special Areas of Conservation’, http://jncc.defra.gov.uk/page-23

  79. Cardigan Bay Special Area of Conservation (SAC), various dates, http://www.cardiganbaysac.org.uk/

  80. Cardigan Bay Special Area of Conservation (SAC) Management Scheme, Section 6.17, http://www.cardiganbaysac.org.uk/pdf%20files/Cardigan_Bay_SAC_Management_Scheme_2008.pdf

  81. Letter from John Taylor, director of policy, CCW, to Graham Rees, Department for Rural Affairs, Welsh Assembly Government, 22 January 2010, Scallop Dredging.

  82. CEFAS, 2011, ‘Fisheries Management’, http://www.cefas.defra.gov.uk/our-services/fisheries-management.aspx

  83. CEFAS, 2011, ‘Fisheries Science Partnership’, http://www.cefas.defra.gov.uk/our-services/fisheries-management/fisheries-science-partnership.aspx

  84. Sally Williams, 25 January 2011, ‘Whale-watchers thrilled by the mighty fin’, Western Mail, http://www.Walesonline.co.uk/news/local-news/cardigan/2011/01/25/whale-watchers-thrilled-by-the-mighty-fin-91466-28047175/

  85. Wildlife Extra, June 2011, ‘21 fin whales spotted in Irish Sea’, http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/FIN-WHALE-uk.html

  86. No author given, 26 January 2010, ‘Rare sighting of humpback whale breaching in Irish sea caught on camera’, Daily Mail, http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1246137/Rare-sighting-humpback-whale-breaching-Irish-sea-caught-camera.html

  87. Thrussell, ‘History of the British tuna fishery’.

  14. THE GIFTS OF THE SEA

  1. British Trust for Ornithology, 2007, ‘Bird Atlas species index–Corncrake’, http://blxl.bto.org/atlases/CE-atlas.html

  2. Bird Care, 2012, ‘Corncrake’, www.birdcare.com/bin/showsonb?corncrake

  3. Macbeth, Act 2, Scene 4.

  Index

  acid rain 221

  Adamson, Joy 205–6

  ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) 169

  African National Congress 205

  agricultural hegemony 154–66, 177

  Agricultural Holdings Act (1948) 156

  agricultural subsidies see farm subsidies

  Agriculture Act (1947) 156

  Aiolornis incredibilis (North American roc) 137

  albacore (longfin) tuna 232, 257, 258, 260

  Albarella, Umberto 131

  albatross 143

  Alces alces (moose/elk) 124, 141, 224

  alder 38, 66, 75, 91, 105, 183

  Aleutian islands 86, 239

  aliens 59–60

  Alladale Estate, Sutherland 124, 126

  Alps 110

  —Julian 186–92, 194–6

  Amazon 2, 52, 114n, 196–7, 209

  Americas 196–9

  —Pleistocene rewilding 139–42

  —see also Brazil; Roraima

  Amur leopard 141

  anchovy 241, 242

  Aneirin 119

  ant, wood 104, 106, 151

  aphid 104

  Apo Island reserve 250, 251

  archaeophytes 144–5

  Arctic fox 86

  Arctodus simus (short-faced bear) 137

  Argentine roc (Argentavis magnificens) 137

  armadillos 137

  ash 38, 66, 67, 82, 91, 105, 212

  aspen 75, 82, 84, 86, 104, 105

  Aspinall, John 204–5

  ‘assemblages of key species’ 216–18

  attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) 169

  aurochs 35, 36, 38, 91, 206, 207–8, 224

  Australia 87–8

  Austria 112, 114

  baboon, olive 89

  Bactrian camel 140, 141

  Bailey, Pete 54

  Balkans 110, 112

  Ballard, J. G. 6

  Baltic Sea 238, 240

  Baltic states 110

  Barbara, a Canadian woman in Roraima 2, 3–4, 5

  Bates, H. E. 71

  bats 82, 113n, 151

  bears 69, 85, 108, 110, 127, 141, 192, 195

  —hunted by Habsburgs 192–3

  —short-faced bear (Arctodus simus) 137

  Beasts (big cats) of Britain 49–60

  beaver 69, 78–83, 85, 86, 105–6, 108, 112, 124

  —Castoroides ohioensis (extinct) 137

  beech 91, 190, 192

  beetles 151, 219n, 222

  Belarus 109, 112

  Belgium 110

  Bengal tiger 222

  Beringia 86–7

  Białowieża Forest 95, 109, 110–12, 200, 208

  big cat sightings/reports in Britain 49–60

  Big Cat Sightings Unit, Welsh Assembly 51, 55

  bilberry 211

  biodiversity 108, 159, 185, 213–14

  birch 38, 62, 66, 74, 75, 77, 92, 95, 103–4, 105, 143, 147, 151, 215

  —dwarf 105, 122

  Bird, Dennis 198

  birds 71–2, 85, 166, 221

  —farmland 158

  —see also specific species

  bison 85, 87

  —Bison latifrons (extinct giant) 137

  —European (wisent) 108, 110–12, 126

  Black Book of Carmarthen 51

  Black Sea 240–41

  blackthorn 92

  Blaeneinion 79, 80

  blue stag beetle 130

  bluebells 95

  bluefin tuna 232, 233, 246–7, 257

  bluefish 240

  boar 69, 93–6, 108, 111, 124, 195

  Bodmin Moor, Beast of Bodmin 53–4

  Bohemian Forest 110

  bonito 240

  Borth beach 77

  Botswana 208

  bottlenose dolphin 253

  Bouldner Cliff excavations 245

  box 92

  Brazil, invasion of Roraima 3, 5–6

  Bronze Age 67, 76, 206–7

  Brüne, Martin 203

  Bryn Brith 63

  Bulgaria 109, 112, 162

  burdock, greater 144 />
  bustard, great 133

  Buthelezi, Mangosuthu 205

  butterflies 108, 211, 213, 219, 222

  Butterworth, Jez: Jerusalem 47–8

  Caesar, Julius 145

  Cahill, Kevin 181

  Cairngorms 120, 220 and n

  Caledonian Forest 98–9, 100, 148–52

  Cambrian Mountains 62–7, 69, 73–7, 159, 164n, 165, 170–78, 210–16

  camels 140, 141

  Canada 154, 170

  cane toad 142–3

  Canney, Susan 219n, 225n

  Cantre’r Gwaelod myth 38

  capercaillie 132

  carbofuran 217

  carbon 236–7

  carbon dioxide 164–5, 198, 199

  Cardigan Bay 19–21, 37, 158, 241–2, 252–5, 257

  —Special Area of Conservation 252–4

  Caribbean monk seal 248

  Carpathian Mountains 108, 109

  Carvajal, Gaspar de 196–7

  Casblaidd 49

  Cass, Caroline 205, 206

  Castoroides ohioensis 137

  catfish, walking 142

  Cath Palug 51

  cattle 156, 159n, 173, 201, 211, 212, 215, 219, 223, 224

  —aurochs 35, 36, 38, 91, 206, 207–8, 224

  —Bronze Age 206–7

  —of the Heck brothers 207–8

  cave lion 127

  Ceauşescu, Nicolae 107

  CEFAS (Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science) 254

  ceremonies 42–3, 168

  Cervus canadensis (American elk) 84n, 149

  chameleon 40–41

  chamois 108, 120, 196

  ‘Charlemagne’ (Economist columnist) 163

  Chatwin, Bruce: The Songlines 58n

  cheetah 139, 140

  Cheruscans 199–200

  Chesapeake Bay 237, 240

  children, play in wild places 167–70

  Claerwen nature reserve 69

  Clare, John 71, 72

  Clearances, Highland 99, 101, 152, 155

  climate change 125, 133, 136, 141, 160, 164–5, 198–9, 224, 236, 243

  —see also global warming

  Clover, Charles: The End of the Line 245

  Clwydian Hills 66–7

  coastal ecosystem 239

  cockchafer larva 1

  cockles 39

  cod 232, 234, 237–8, 250

  Common Agricultural Policy 161–3, 181–2

  common vetch 144

  conservation movement 209–26

  —and ‘assemblages of key species’ 216–18

  —and eviction 201

  —positive changing attitudes 226–7

  —and the preservation of former farming systems 214–15, 224–6

  —questionable/inappropriate policies 8, 83, 209–10, 214–25

  —see also game reserves; national parks; nature reserves

  Cooke, Jay 202

  copper 173

  coppicing 91–2n, 92, 222

  corn 154

  corncockle 144

  corncrake 264–5

  cornflower 144

  Corsica 161

  Countryside Council for Wales 69, 215–16, 226, 253–4

  County Times 51

  cownose ray 237

  crab apple 157–8

  crabs 237, 251

  —hermit 231

  —masked 231

  —shore 231

  —spider 228, 229–30, 231–32

  crack willow 144

  cranes 35–6, 226

  —common crane 133

  crayfish 142, 145

  crested tit 151

  Crèvecoeur, Hector St John de 45–6

  Croatia 107, 188, 189, 193

  Cronon, William 177

  crows 172

  cruel sports 139

  Culloden, battle of 99, 152

  curlew 158

  cypermethrin 158

  Czech Republic 110

  Daily Mail 56–7

  Dale, Thomas 45

  Dalmatian pelican 135

  Dangerous Wild Animals Act 94

  Danube delta 107

  Dark Mountain 197–8

  dead wood/trees 83, 111, 151, 192, 222, 225

  deadnettle 144

  deer

  —red see red deer

  —roe 120

  —sika 120

  —stalking 100, 101, 102, 116–17, 149, 155

  deforestation 66–7, 68, 69, 130, 152, 197

  —conservation management and the clearing of trees 210

  Denmark 112

  Dinaric Mountains 110, 190

  Dinofelis 58n

  ‘Dinogad’s Shift’ 119

  Disney, Michael 50–51

  Doedicurus 137

  dog bites 89

  dolphins 18, 25, 232, 240, 241, 253, 268

  Drefursennaidd 27

  dry rot 144

  Dundreggan estate, Glenmoriston 99–101, 103–6, 121–4

  dunnock 95

  Dutch elm disease 72

  eagle owl 131

  eagles

  —golden 121, 123–4, 217

  —white-tailed sea 102–3, 131, 146, 217

  Eagleton, Terry: The English Novel 204 and n

  East Africa 201, 208

  ecological corridors 109

  ecological damage see environmental/ecological damage

  ecosystems

  —American 139–40

  —‘assemblages of key species’ 216–18

  —bacterially dominated 240

  —coastal 239

  —‘damage’ by native species 96

  —damage by sheep 70 see also grazing

  —damage by soil depletion see soil depletion

  —elephant-adapted 9, 91–3

  —and the emptiness of the Cambrians 62–7, 76–7, 210–12

  —and extinctions see extinction of animal species

  —favoured by the conservation movement 216–20

  —and the Gaia hypothesis 243

  —German 208

  —and inappropriate conservation policies 8, 83, 209–10, 214–25

  —intensive management of 82, 130, 209–10, 214–21, 222

  —and invasive/non-native species 142–6, 178

  —keystone species see keystone species

  —marine 232–4, 235–43

  —monocultures 95, 153–4, 168, 242

  —palaeocology 93, 136

  —revival through rewilding see rewilding

  —and the Shifting Baseline Syndrome 69, 92, 142, 243, 244

  —Siberian 141–2

  —as spectral relics 93

  —trophic cascades see trophic cascades

  —see also environmental/ecological damage

  Eelmoor Marsh, Hampshire 125

  eels 37

  eland 139

  Elasmotherium caucasicum 90

  Elasmotherium sibiricum 90

  elephant 90–92, 137, 139, 140, 141, 142

  —and coppicing 91–2

  —straight-tusked 9, 90, 91, 92n, 128, 141, 219n

  Eliot, T. S. (quote) 7

  elk (American, Cervus canadensis) 84n, 149

  elk (moose, Alces alces) 124, 141, 224

  enclosure 155, 156–7, 167–8 and n, 201

  —Highland Clearances 99, 101, 152, 155

  End of the Line, The (Clover) 246

  English Novel, The (Eagleton) 204 and n

  Ennerdale 225–6

  environmental/ecological damage from agricultural hegemony 154–66, 177

  —deforestation see deforestation

  —extinction of animals see extinction of animal species

  —habitat destruction see habitat destruction

  —lead contamination 31

  —soil depletion see soil depletion through grazing see grazing through the fishing industry 237–8, 239–49, 250, 253–4

  environmentalism 11–12

  —conservation movement see conservation movement

  —reforestation see
reforestation

  —reintroduction of species see reintroduction of species

  —rewilding see rewilding

  epiphytes 67

  Eremotherium 137

  Estonia 109, 161

  eugenics 203, 205

  European Commission 162, 165

  European Journal of Forest Research 117

  European Union 18–19, 165, 181–2, 246, 251

  eutrophication 240

  extinction of animal species 9, 87–8, 90–91, 136–8, 224, 245, 250

  —from climate change 125, 224

  —dates table for Britain 124–35

  —from hunting 9, 87–8, 90–91, 127, 132, 133, 136–8, 138n, 197, 199

  —and termination of trophic cascades 88–9, 139

  farm subsidies 11, 118, 152, 154, 156, 157, 160–63, 164, 166, 177, 180–83

  —Pillar 2 payments (green subsidies) 162–3, 173

  Farmers’ Union of Wales 80, 83, 118

  Farrant, Jenny 96

  Featherstone, Alan Watson 96–101, 103, 104–6, 121–4, 146–9, 150, 151–2

  fertilizers 158

  field pansy 144

  ‘fifty trees’ guidelines, CAP 161

  fin whale 235, 257

  Findhorn Foundation 97, 98, 150

  Finland 109, 146

  fire 88

  fish

  —discarded 246

  —as essential source of protein 246

  —migratory see migratory fish

  —predatory 145, 238, 241, 250, 257

  —size 234–5, 244, 250

  —stocks 19, 241–42, 243–4, 246, 250, 251

  —see also specific types and species

  Fisher, Dr Mark 10n

  fishing 15, 17–22, 32–3, 241

  —damage to industry from decline of sharks 237

  —environmental and ecological damage through 237–8, 239–49, 250, 253–4

  —exploitative 234, 237–8, 242, 244–5, 247, 248

  —illegal 18, 246

  —and Japan 246–7

  —Mesolithic 245

  —opposition of industry to marine reserves 251–52

  —over-quota 18–19

  —and protected marine reserves 249, 250–53

  —results of stopping 249–50

  —rockhopper trawling 247–8

  —scallop fishing/dredging 237, 253–5

  —seamount trawling 248, 250

  —subsidies 246

  —transformation of the seas through industrial 233–5, 237–8, 239–49

  —wasteful 246

  —worldwide weight of fish landed 251

  Flamborough Head 249

  flatfish 21, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29–30, 32, 36

  floods 82–3, 159–60, 165 and n

  flounders 26, 29, 30, 32

  folk heroes 61n

  forest see woodland

  forest law 200–201

  Forestry Commission 96, 105, 147, 148, 149, 150, 163n, 164n, 226

  —Wales 164, 176

  fox 117, 120

 

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