The RSPB seeks to manage its reserves through sound habitat management but sometimes at certain sites, we have to take the decision to remove individuals of certain species, in order to protect threatened animal, bird or plant species.
In most cases, this is to recover the numbers of threatened wild birds: for example, we remove certain predators to aid the recovery of ground-nesting bird populations. We always favour approaches - such as habitat management and predator exclusion techniques – but, as a last resort, killing may sometimes be necessary.
However, before the RSPB carries out any kind of vertebrate control, we first seek evidence that a problem exists. If there is good evidence that it does, we look for a non-lethal solution and, if there is one, implement that. However, non-lethal methods, whilst always the preferred way of doing things, are not always practical or effective and the problem may require lethal vertebrate control. In order to even consider this, the following four criteria must be met:
Only when these four criteria are satisfied is lethal vertebrate control undertaken. This is the case for all the figures presented below, which are for the most recent reporting period (Nov 2023 -Oct 2024), with the previous 12 month period in brackets.
Vertebrate control summary on RSPB reserves for 2024 (2023 in brackets)
Sites
Number killed
Reason
Mink
12 (14)
101 (80)
Water Vole & ground-nesting bird conservation
Red Fox
27 (33)
342 ( 383)
Ground-nesting birds & Crane conservation
Grey Squirrel
1 (0)
48 (0)
Red Squirrel conservation
Mole
1 (1)
470 (175)
Listeriosis risk in cattle
Rabbit
2 (1)
351 (284)
Damage to crops
Goat
20 (30)
Woodland habitat restoration
Fallow Deer
10 (10)
556 (513)
Muntjac Deer
9 (7)
161 (131)
Roe Deer
11 (14)
574 (513)
Red Deer
10 (11)
1215 (910)
Sika Deer
3 (3)
152 (223)
Carrion/Hooded Crow
9 (9)
334 (289)
Waders & terns
Barnacle Goose
35 nests, 172 eggs (41 nests, 212 eggs)
Tern and Avocet conservation
Canada Goose
4 (4)
149 nests, 65 eggs (72 nests, 69 eggs)
Air safeguarding
Greylag Goose
1 (2)
169 eggs (422 eggs)
Herring Gull
2 (2)
2 shot 18 eggs (14 eggs)
Roseate and Sandwich Tern conservation
Lesser Black-backed Gull
6 eggs (6 eggs)