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Beavers build first dam in Exmoor for 400 years

Beavers build first dam in Exmoor for 400 years

Beavers have built their first dam in Exmoor in more than 400 years.

The semi-aquatic rodents, which created the dam at the Holnicote Estate near Minehead following restoration work by the National Trust, are the first to be released into the wild by the trust in its 125-year history.

The animals were seen on wildlife cameras gnawing at trees and collecting vegetation as part of the process.

They settled into a 2.7-acre enclosure on the Somerset estate in January, and have been monitored by National Trust and Exeter University since.

Rangers are calling the beavers "ecosystem engineers" for constructing an "instant wetland" on the Somerset estate - just nine months into the introduction of water.

Their construction has allowed for deep pools of water - offering animals shelter from predators and a place to safely store their food.

Human communities benefit too - as beaver dams typically prevent flooding through slowing down and storing water as it flows downstream.

Ben Eardley, project manager at the National Trust, said as we face climate change beaver dams are part of the "solution".

He said: "It might look modest, but this beaver dam is incredibly special - it's the first to appear on Exmoor for almost half a millennium and marks a step change in how we manage the landscape.

"What's amazing is that it's only been here a few weeks but has created an instant wetland.

"We've already spotted kingfishers at the site, and over time, as the beavers extend their network of dams and pools, we should see increased opportunities for other wildlife, including amphibians, insects, bats and birds."

He added: "The recent rain we've had is a reminder of the significant role beavers can play in engineering the landscape.

"As we face into the effects of climate change and more frequent extreme weather events, natural interventions like this need to be part of the solution."

Hunted for their meat, fur and scent glands, beavers became extinct in the UK in the 16th century, but have been reintroduced to a few sites in Britain the past 20 years.

The National Trust's project - part of its Riverlands programme - hopes to revive UK rivers by improving the quality of wildlife, boosting water quality and tackling climate change.

A similar five-year trial on the River Otter in Devon was recently celebrated as a success by the government, which is now considering a national plan to reintroduce beavers into natural habitats.

Reference: Sky News: Sabah Choudhry, news reporter  

Germany may cull up to 70,000 chickens as bird flu found on another farm

   

Germany may cull up to 70,000 chickens as bird flu found on another farm

HAMBURG (Reuters) - Bird flu has been found on another chicken farm in Germany and a programme to slaughter up to 70,000 poultry is being prepared, authorities said on Tuesday.

Type H5N8 bird flu was confirmed in a farm near Rostock in the eastern state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, said a spokesman for the local government authority Landkreis Rostock.

About 4,500 chickens at the farm would have to be culled, but the farm has several locations and the total could reach 70,000, the spokesman said.

"To combat the outbreak of the disease and prevent it spreading further, it is necessary from a veterinary medical viewpoint to cull up to 70,000 poultry at several locations," the spokesman said. "Preparations have started".

Meanwhile, the north German state of Schleswig-Holstein on Tuesday also reported another H5N8 outbreak on a farm in the Kreis Nordfriesland area, with about 1,000 ducks, geese and chickens slaughtered.

A series of outbreaks of bird flu has been reported in Europe in the past weeks, with wild birds suspected to be spreading the disease.

Around 16,100 turkeys were slaughtered after bird flu was found on another Germany poultry farm in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, authorities said on Monday.

Denmark has ordered 25,000 chickens to be culled after finding H5N8 bird flu on a farm, authorities said on Monday, effectively halting the country's poultry and egg exports to countries outside the European Union for at least three months.

Other cases have been reported in France and the Netherlands. Britain ordered a cull of 13,000 birds at a farm in northwest England after detecting cases there.

Risk to humans from the disease is considered low, but past outbreaks among farm birds have needed extensive slaughtering programmes to contain them.

(Reporting by Michael Hogan; Editing by David Evans and Bernadette Baum)

Reference: Reuters: 17/11/2020

Scientists studying wolves as first responders against deadly brain disease

Scientists studying wolves as first responders against deadly brain disease 

Are the wolves of Yellowstone National Park the first line of defense against a terrible disease that preys on herds of wildlife?

That is the question for a research project underway in the park, and preliminary results suggest that the answer is yes. Researchers are studying what is known as the predator cleansing effect, which occurs when a predator sustains the health of a prey population by killing the sickest animals. If the idea holds, it could mean that wolves have a role to play in limiting the spread of chronic wasting disease, which is infecting deer and similar animals across the country and around the world. Experts fear that it could one day jump to humans.

“There is no management tool that is effective” for controlling the disease, said Ellen Brandell, a doctoral student in wildlife ecology at Penn State University who is leading the project in collaboration with the US Geological Survey and the National Park Service. “There is no vaccine. Can predators potentially be the solution?”

Many biologists and conservationists say that more research would strengthen the case that reintroducing more wolves in certain parts of the United States could help manage wildlife diseases, although the idea is sure to face pushback from hunters, ranchers and others concerned about competition from wolves.

Chronic wasting disease, a contagious neurological disease, is so unusual that some experts call it a “disease from outer space”. First discovered among wild deer in 1981, it leads to deterioration of brain tissue in cervids, mostly deer but also elk, moose and caribou, with symptoms such as listlessness, drooling, staggering, emaciation and death.

It is caused by an abnormal version of a cell protein called a prion, which functions very differently from bacteria or viruses. The disease has spread across wild cervid populations and is now found in 26 states in the US and several Canadian provinces, as well as in South Korea and Scandinavia.

The disease is part of a group called transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, the most famous of which is bovine spongiform encephalopathy, also known as mad cow disease. Mad cow in humans causes a variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and there was an outbreak among people in the 1990s in Britain from eating tainted meat.

Cooking does not kill the prions, and experts fear that chronic wasting disease could spread to humans who hunt and consume deer or other animals that are infected with it.

The disease has infected many deer herds in Wyoming, and it spread to Montana in 2017. Both states are adjacent to Yellowstone, so experts are concerned that the deadly disease could soon make its way into the park’s vast herds of elk and deer.

Unless, perhaps, the park’s 10 packs of wolves, which altogether contain about 100 individuals, prey on and consume diseased animals that are easier to pick off because of their illness (the disease does not appear to infect wolves).

“Wolves have really been touted as the best type of animal to remove infected deer, because they are cursorial — they chase their prey and they look for the weak ones,” Brandell said. By this logic, diseased deer and other animals would be the most likely to be eliminated by wolves.

Preliminary results in Yellowstone have shown that wolves can delay outbreaks of chronic wasting disease in their prey species and can decrease outbreak size, Brandell said. There is little published research on “predator cleansing”, and this study aims to add support for the use of predators to manage disease.

A prime concern about the spread of chronic wasting disease in the Yellowstone region is the fact that Wyoming maintains 22 state-sponsored feeding grounds that concentrate large numbers of elk unnaturally in the Yellowstone region. And just south of Grand Teton National Park lies the National Elk Refuge, where thousands of animals, displaced by cattle ranches, are fed each winter to satisfy elk hunters and tourists. Many wildlife biologists say concentrating the animals in such small areas is a recipe for the rapid spread of chronic wasting disease.

When cases of the disease among deer ranged from five per cent to 50 per cent in Wisconsin and Colorado, those states were considered hot spots. But if the disease gets into game farms like the ones in Wyoming, “prevalence rates skyrocket to 90 or 100 per cent,” said Mark Zabel, associate director of the Prion Research Center at Colorado State University.

Prions are especially deadly. Unlike bacteria and viruses, prions can persist in soil for 10 years or more and endure on vegetation. Even if a herd dies out or is culled, new animals moving into the area can become infected.

The origin of the disease is unknown. Andrew P. Dobson, a professor of ecology and epidemiology at Princeton, who has studied predator cleansing, believes the illness is largely the result of ecosystems with too few predators and scavengers.

Restoring the population of predators in national parks and wild lands would go a long way toward healthier ecosystems with less disease, Dobson said.

Ken McDonald, chief of the wildlife division of the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Department, expressed doubts that wolves would prevent chronic wasting disease.

“Wolves help remove sick animals, but animals don’t get visibly ill for about two years,” he said. “So they are carriers and spreaders but don’t get the classic symptoms.”

McDonald said that maintaining a large enough wolf population outside Yellowstone to control chronic wasting disease would require so many wolves that it would be socially unacceptable, especially to ranchers and hunters.

The state’s approach to controlling the disease, he said, is to increase the number of deer that can be killed in places where the disease is growing.

Brandell, however, said that wolves may detect the disease long before it becomes apparent to people, through smell or a slight change in the movement of prey, which could be beneficial.

“Wolves wouldn’t be a magic cure everywhere,” she said. “But in places where it was just starting and you have an active predator guild, they could keep it at bay and it might never get a foothold.”

Reference: Independent: Jim Robbins  

Birth of rare baby female rhino celebrated at Chester Zoo

Birth of rare baby female rhino celebrated at Chester Zoo

The arrival of the female eastern black rhino following a 15-month pregnancy was caught on camera at the zoo.

Pictures show the young calf suckling from her mother Ema Elsa just 10 minutes after she was born.

Andrew McKenzie, team manager of rhinos at the zoo, said: “The birth of a critically endangered eastern black rhino is always very special.

“And to be able to watch on camera as a calf is born is an incredible privilege – with rhino numbers so, so low it, sadly, isn’t something that’s captured very often.

“Seeing the little one then get to her feet with a gentle nudge from mum; take her first tentative steps and suckle for the first time is then the icing on the cake.”

“These rhinos have been pushed to the very edge of existence and every single addition to the European endangered species breeding programme is celebrated globally,” Mr McKenzie said.

The birth of a rare baby rhino at Chester Zoo will be “celebrated globally”, according to keepers.

The arrival of the female eastern black rhino following a 15-month pregnancy was caught on camera at the zoo.

Pictures show the young calf suckling from her mother Ema Elsa just 10 minutes after she was born.

Andrew McKenzie, team manager of rhinos at the zoo, said: “The birth of a critically endangered eastern black rhino is always very special.

“And to be able to watch on camera as a calf is born is an incredible privilege – with rhino numbers so, so low it, sadly, isn’t something that’s captured very often.

Fewer than 1,000 eastern black rhinos remain on the planet.

“These rhinos have been pushed to the very edge of existence and every single addition to the European endangered species breeding programme is celebrated globally,” Mr McKenzie said.

The zoo is now asking animal lovers to help choose a name for the youngster.

Followers of the zoo on Facebook can take part in a poll to choose between Kasulu, Koshi and Kaari.

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