The status of the otter (Lutra lutra) in the British Isles |
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Authors: | S. M. MACDONALD |
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Affiliation: | The Vincent Wildlife Trust, Baltic Exchange Buildings, 21 Bury Street, London EC3A 5AU |
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Abstract: | National field surveys for otters were carried out between 1977 and 1981. The species is apparently absent from large areas of England, although healthy populations still occur in the south-west. In many other areas, populations are isolated and fragmented and there is some evidence for continuing declines. In Wales the otter is rare or absent from the south and parts of the north. Healthy populations are present in the Highland Region of Scotland, on the north and west coasts and in the islands but there is evidence of a decline in the south and east-central lowlands. Otters are widespread and common in Ireland which sustains the best of the known populations in Europe. Pollution by pesticides probably caused the initial rapid decline of the species but habitat destruction is increasingly important and where habitat is poor, human disturbance assumes greater significance. There is no evidence of competition with mink. The otter is now a protected species but if it is to recover some of its former range, remaining habitat must be retained. While otter populations have decreased over much of northern Europe, the animal survives, albeit somewhat precariously, in a few southern parts of the continent. |
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