The King Report on Badger Culling
Oct. 23rd, 2007 09:59 pmThe King report is here: http://www.defra.gov.uk/an imalh/tb/pdf/badgersreport -king.pdf
Basically, it's an attempt at a stopgap. Kill enough badgers to decrease the "reservoir of infection" and maintain the cull until something better (like badger vaccination or -gasp- better farming practices) comes along. It won't be a one-off and to work it would need to be repeated year after year in cull areas.
The smart, long-term approach would be to tag badgers now, get a really good idea of their movements and meanwhile expedite vaccine development. Then routinely vaccinate until the "reservoir of infection" is emptied. This would be cheaper in the long term, it would be massively more acceptable to the public, and it would be more effective.
I hope we can keep the anger level high enough that the politicians see that this is a vote-loser. That might steer them in the right direction. Very unpopular cull programmes would probably result in direct-action badger defense protests and a whole wave of "swampy versus the farmers" protest, which would be less desirable but an understandable reaction.
Basically, it's an attempt at a stopgap. Kill enough badgers to decrease the "reservoir of infection" and maintain the cull until something better (like badger vaccination or -gasp- better farming practices) comes along. It won't be a one-off and to work it would need to be repeated year after year in cull areas.
The smart, long-term approach would be to tag badgers now, get a really good idea of their movements and meanwhile expedite vaccine development. Then routinely vaccinate until the "reservoir of infection" is emptied. This would be cheaper in the long term, it would be massively more acceptable to the public, and it would be more effective.
I hope we can keep the anger level high enough that the politicians see that this is a vote-loser. That might steer them in the right direction. Very unpopular cull programmes would probably result in direct-action badger defense protests and a whole wave of "swampy versus the farmers" protest, which would be less desirable but an understandable reaction.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-24 10:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-10-24 11:43 am (UTC)Of course this won't work if the GP-shy badgers are exposed to a constant reservoir of infection from cattle herds. The irony.
The ISG report concluded that culling wasn't financially viable; vaccination is probably going to be more expensive. I can't see it being cheaper.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-24 06:07 pm (UTC)So long as we continue to farm cattle, the priority has to be developing a vaccine for them (vaccinating badgers would be a very expensive alternative).
I know one of the people at Defra involved in organising badger culls and have every sympathy with civil servants, in their own view trying to serve rural communities, and worried about animal rights activists if anyone finds out.
I also know people in local badger groups and wildlife trusts who are likely to be very unhappy indeed.
On the political side, I think its telling that David King is allowed to override the opinion of the experts commissioned to work on this over the last decade or so, who said that "badger culling cannot meaningfully contribute to the control of cattle TB in Britain". King is asking for further analysis to disprove their conclusion, but making his own radical conclusions ahead of this further analysis being undertaken. Someone up top has already made up their mind.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-24 06:49 pm (UTC)Defra staff are probably right to be concerned.
King's position was explained a little in this evening's R4 news; during the BSE flap he overrode the finding that BSE was in sheep. It *wasn't* in sheep (there was a cockup at the lab), and for saving the day he seems to have earned special status. He's also quite a bulldog in debate. But it does utterly stink of political interference, doesn't it? Give the farmers what they want regardless of what is right.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-25 09:39 am (UTC)Apparently it's a very large area now, so you are talking 200,000 badgers.
Also, when you kill badgers, other badgers start to move much more widely, since there is territory for them to move into. Thus you get much more movement when you do the culling.
Can't see it makes any sense at all.
Though I've never heard any details on what impact TB has on badgers. Is it just a bit inconvenient, or do they die a horrible and lingering death. ie is there a good reason to cull badgers to stop other badgers getting TB. If this was the case, I'm guessing it would be being used as an argument.
no subject
Date: 2007-10-25 11:31 am (UTC)The wildlife-welfare card has not been played as far as I can see. Instead it's the "lovely but lethal! Look, they're just huge plague rats!" angle at the mo.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 02:45 pm (UTC)(ask me if you can't see it)
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v450/n7166/full/450001b.html
no subject
Date: 2007-11-04 11:20 pm (UTC)