Otters
are no longer considered to be a threatened species
in Wales according to an on-going environmental
survey. Early indications
show that numbers of the river dwelling mammal has
increased.
Thousands
of sites were surveyed
|
The
survey - carried out by the Environment Agency,
the Countryside Council for Wales and Wildlife
Trusts - covers over a thousand sites in Wales.
Michael Evans, conservation
manager for the Environment Agency welcomed the
findings. "We are
seeing good indications of increases in otter
numbers but won't have the full results until
the end of the season," he said. "We
will put together the results and release the
full report in the Autumn and see what the next
steps are. "But
we are already getting involved in work like our
awareness and building holts in our habitat awareness
schemes."
Results
of the survey were revealed at the Royal Welsh
show on Monday. Daphne
Neville, an otter campaigner from Gloucestershire,
believes that the creature is vital to the environment.
"Otters are now considered
to be one of the most important mammals in the
world," she said. "They
are the barometer of good health - if you get
an otter in the river, it's ok. "If
you don't get an otter in the river, then there
is something wrong," she said.
Ms
Neville brings hand-reared otters to the Royal
Welsh show every year as a way of teaching the
public about the creature. "I
got involved in 1980 when there had been a government
survey to say that the British otter in Wales
and England was in a very bad way. "We
buy our otters as tiny babies from zoos and bring
them up in the house."
Despite
otters being a protected species, visitors to
the Royal Welsh can handle the tame otters brought
to the show by Ms Neville. "Because
the otter attracts the public, then we can say
to the public - when you go down to the river,
please keep your dog on the lead, please pick
up your plastic litter because wild otters roll
in litter. "These
are lovable and cuddly and we have got three of
them at the moment," she added.
Virtual
extinction
Otters
have made a dramatic comeback in recent years
after virtual extinction in the 1960s.
Their decline was linked to
pesticides and habitat loss. But
the otter's gradual return began with the phasing
out of chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides, which
with other chemicals built up in fish including
eels, the otter's prey of choice
In
1998, the government set a target of restoring
otters to all UK rivers by 2010
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