Once the rivers were cleaned up,
fish returned to once-polluted waters and otters began to spread back eastwards
from their strongholds in Devon and Wales
By Michael McCarthy, Environment
Editor
Thursday, 18 August 2011
It has taken 30 years, but the
otter's comeback is now complete. After becoming extinct across most of England
in the Fifties and Sixties, one of Britain's best-loved animals has now
returned to every English county, the Environment Agency announced yesterday.
The slow but steady recolonisation
of its former haunts has been rounded off with the reappearance of otters in
Kent, the last county to have been without them, the agency said.
The otter's return represents a
happy ending to one of the worst episodes in modern British wildlife history:
the sudden disappearance of one of our most widespread and charismatic mammals.
The process began around 1956 and
was almost certainly caused by the introduction of powerful organochlorine
pesticides such as aldrin and dieldrin. Residues of these chemicals were washed
into the rivers where otters lived, poisoning them.
As wild otters are hard to spot –
their presence is usually detected by their spraints, or droppings – it was
several years before the scale of their disappearance began to dawn on people,
but by then they had been wiped out over vast areas of lowland England.
Despite the banning of
organochlorine pesticides in the mid-Sixties, otters continued to decline, and
their population reached a low point by the end of the 1970s, when they had
effectively vanished from everywhere except the West Country and parts of Northern
England (although good numbers remained in Wales and Scotland).
The first national otter survey,
carried out between 1977 and 1979, detected the presence of otters in just over
5 per cent of the 2,940 sites surveyed; all the sites were known to have held
the animals previously.
But then a comeback gradually began.
Helped by a substantial clean-up of England's rivers, which brought back fish
to many once-polluted watercourses, and by legal protection, otters began to
spread back eastwards into England from their strongholds in Devon and in areas
of the Welsh borders, such as the Wye Valley.
By the time of the fourth otter
survey, carried out between 2000 and 2002, more than 36 per cent of the sites
examined showed otter traces; and when the fifth survey was carried out,
between 2009 and 2010, the figure had risen to nearly 60 per cent, with otters
back in every English county except Kent. Now wildlife experts at the
Environment Agency have confirmed that there are at least two otters in Kent,
which have built their holts on the River Medway and the River Eden.
"The recovery of otters from
near-extinction shows how far we've come in controlling pollution and improving
water quality," said Alastair Driver, the Environment Agency's National
Conservation Manager. "Rivers in England are the healthiest for over 20
years, and otters, salmon and other wildlife are returning to many rivers for
the first time since the industrial revolution.
"The fact that otters are now
returning to Kent is the final piece in the jigsaw for otter recovery in
England and is a symbol of great success for everybody involved in otter
conservation."
Otters are at the top of the food
chain, and are therefore an important indicator of river health. The clean-up
means that they are now inhabiting once-polluted rivers running through cities
– something which would have been unthinkable before the population crash – and
they have been detected in places such as Stoke-on-Trent, Reading, Exeter and
Leeds, as well as in more likely urban centres, such as Winchester.
Although they are now widespread once more, otters' nocturnal habits and riverine habitat make them difficult to glimpse, let alone observe, in England. The best place to see otters in Britain is Western Scotland, where the animals have become semi-marine and live along the coast. They can regularly be seen foraging along the shoreline in the daytime, especially on some of the larger islands, such as Mull and Skye.
Although they are now widespread once more, otters' nocturnal habits and riverine habitat make them difficult to glimpse, let alone observe, in England. The best place to see otters in Britain is Western Scotland, where the animals have become semi-marine and live along the coast. They can regularly be seen foraging along the shoreline in the daytime, especially on some of the larger islands, such as Mull and Skye.
Curtis,
ReplyDeleteWhat is not to like about an otter?
We've probably talked before about Gavin Maxwell's wonderful book A Ring of Bright Water...?
Of course Maxwell's otter, Midge, was not a "native" (lutra lutra) but an import from the marshes of Iraq -- a smooth-tailed otter like this one.
(And by the by, isn't that second-from-bottom character a sea otter?)
Yes, it is an irresistible sea otter, which I could not/did not resist. You know your otters. I'm glad you liked this. I was hugely cheered by the Independent article. Curtis
ReplyDeleteI love otters. They are one of my favorite animals. I am glad they are doing well :)
ReplyDelete