Transcript
Page 1: The Return of the Wild: rewilding Scotland

„The Return of the Wild: conceptions of rewilding in the

Scottish Highlands‟

Holly Deary,

Supported by Scottish Land & Estates and the Association of Deer Management Groups

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PresentationOutline

• Restoring ‘wildness’ to the Scottish Highlands

• Distinctness of the Scottish wild land context,

• Challenges to moving Scotland’s wild land agenda forward,

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Restoring Wildness

Principles

• Landscape scale conservation, • Promoting wilderness qualities, • Ecological processes as paramount, • Minimal intervention,

Practices .......................

• Manipulation of grazing pressure,i.e. Removing sheep, culling deer,

• Restoration of hill tracks, • Restructuring plantations,

„Long term vision for core reserves of wild land where natural processes dominate‟

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Unanswered Questions

• What level of agreement is there over definitions of ‘rewilding’/’enhancingwildness and methods for its practical application?’

• How compatible is enhancing wildness with our current subscriptions to moreconventional conservation strategies?

• Does ‘managing for wildness’ make sense in the Scottish context as a landmanagement strategy?

• What are the primary fault lines associated with ‘managing for wildness’ inScotland?

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A „wild land‟ Delphi model

Eclectic mix of 18 estates (i.e. Private, NGO, Trust ownership)

An adapted Delphi model- Structured communication system,

- Series of rounds, - Expert panel,

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Ambiguous terminology

Uniquely Scottish context

Lack of conceptual clarity

Integrating agendas

Clashing imperatives

The „rewilding‟ Fault-lines

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1. Ambiguous terminology

• Lack of consensus as to what the emergent environmental ethic means,

• Lack of understanding as to how it should be manifested in the landscape,

• Interchangeable terminology

• Conflicting views of the concept in accordance with parameters used to understand ‘wild land’,

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2. Distinctly Scottish Wild Land Context

Heavily managed landscapes to retain the high biodiversity and socio-economic benefits associated with them,

Conservation must co-exist with other land management practices in Scotland,

Distinct Scottish ‘wild land’ terminology framework,

“There are some large areas of Scotland, particularly in the north and west, whose largely semi-natural landscapes show minimal signs of

human influence” (Scottish Natural Heritage, 2012)

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Is rewilding, with its implicit values of naturalness,authenticity and historical fidelity, capable of coping withthe complexity of natural and cultural heritage in theScottish Highlands?

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3. Lack of conceptual clarity

• Does managing for wildness in a cultural landscape make sense?

• Where is the cultural value of these hybrid landscapes positioned within the restoration framework?

• What is the teleological state of naturalness that some of these estates are aspiring to?

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4. Integrating agendas

• Incompatibility between current nature conservation agenda and ‘wild land agenda’......

• Restrictiveness of a policy framework still founded upon the ‘nature under threat’ approach to conservation.....

• Holistic, landscape scale, minimal intervention approach vs. targeted biodiversity agendas.......

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5.Clashing imperatives

• Sterilisation of the Highlands.....

• Embrace Scotland’s cultural heritage......

• Reconciling ‘wildness’ with more traditional land uses....

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Conclusions to date....

Approaches for managing wild land in Scotland are diffuse & disparate, and depend on the parameters of ‘wild land’ employed,

Scotland’s natural and cultural heritage necessitates a pragmatic understanding of rewilding in the same way that wild land provides a pragmatic understanding of wilderness,

Conservation strategies founded upon wildness remain controversial among many Scottish land managers – such challenges must be overcome to move Scotland’s wild strategy forward,

Restoration through active interventions.

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Thank you


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