If this idea is workable, why haven’t we done this before?Ī large part of the answer is shifting baseline syndrome. When a topic has been explored for many years - like conservation - people become suspicious of new ideas. If the natural order of our ecosystem in Britain includes these apex predators, and we had wolves right up until a few hundred years ago, why are we only talking about them now? We had brown bears until the Bronze Age, lynx in the ninth century and wolves well into the eighteenth century.Įuropean brown bear, Ashley Grove SHIFTING BASELINE SYNDROME These predators aren’t all in the completely distant past - this isn’t Jurassic Park. The natural world we know in Britain today is nothing like the natural world that once was. If you’re struggling to imagine that we had brown bears here, I hear you - don’t even get me started on the fact that we used to have elephants. In the early Holocene, we had three apex predators: lynx, wolves, and brown bears. The browsing of these grazing animals prevented the land being overtaken by dense tree cover - allowing our plant and animal life to thrive in the sunshine of meadows and expanses of wetland. We used to have wild ox, bison, horses, boars and beavers that helped to maintain that gold standard landscape prized by nature reserves: mosaic habitat. The biggest hole in our ecosystem is our missing landscape architects. We haven’t seen Britain’s true natural state for thousands of years, even in non-developed areas, because of the chasms we’ve created in the ecosystem. If you’re stood in Britain, looking at a nice woodland or countryside scene, and thinking to yourself that you’re looking at what our landscape used to look like, or that you’re looking at some of the last original habitat or ecosystems we have, then I hate to break it to you but you’re wrong. We haven’t had a complete, fully-functioning ecosystem for more than 3,000 years, or even longer if you look back to when we had wild horses.įor the past 3,000 years, Britain has had what you could charitably call gaps (or accurately call huge gaping holes) in its ecosystems. We kind of know this subconsciously - we’ve all seen Tony Robinson telling us that what looks like a small muddy rock is actually a Stone Age axe head on Time Team - but the reality is harsh. We started interfering with the natural world pretty early on. Bears, wolves, lynx.can we really live alongside them once again in the UK? Hayley Kinsey outlines how and why we could and should.
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