“I
have an unhealthy obsession with sheep,” Mr. Monbiot admits, in his
book “Feral.” “I hate them.” In a chapter titled “Sheepwrecked,” he
calls sheep a “white plague” and “a slow-burning ecological disaster,
which has done more damage to the living systems of this country than
either climate change or industrial pollution.”
The
thought of all those sheep — more than 30 million nationwide — makes
Mr. Monbiot a little crazy. But to be fair, sheep seem to lead us all
beyond the realm of logic. The nibbled landscape that he denounces as “a
bowling green with contours” is beloved by the British public. Visitors
(including this writer, otherwise a wildlife advocate) tend to feel the
same when they hike the hills and imagine they are still looking out on
William Blake’s “green and pleasant land.” Even British
conservationists, who routinely scold other countries for letting
livestock graze in their national parks, somehow fail to notice that
Britain’s national parks are overrun with sheep.
Mr.
Monbiot detects “a kind of cultural cringe” that keeps people from
criticizing sheep farming. (In part, he blames children’s books for
clouding vulnerable minds with idyllic ideas about farming.) Sheep have
“become a symbol of nationhood, an emblem almost as sacred as Agnus Dei,
the Lamb of God,” he writes. Much of the nation tunes in ritually on
Sunday nights to BBC television’s “Countryfile,” a show about rural
issues, which he characterizes as an escapist modern counterpart to
pastoral poetry. “If it were any keener on sheep,” he says, “it would be
illegal.”
The
many friends of British sheep have not yet called for burning Mr.
Monbiot at the stake. But they have protested. “Without our uplands, we
wouldn’t have a UK sheep industry,” Phil Bicknell, an economist for the
National Farmers Union pointed out. “Farmgate sales of lamb are worth
over £1bn” — or $1.7 billion — “to U.K. agriculture.” The only wolves he
wanted to hear about were his own Wolverhampton Wanderers Football
Club. A critic for The Guardian, where Mr. Monbiot contributes a column,
linked the argument against sheep, rather unfairly, to anti-immigrant
nativists, adding “sheep have been here a damn sight longer than
Saxons.”
More
soberly, the Oxford geographer John Boardman says the uplands, in the
Lake District and elsewhere, have already begun to recover as government
policies encourage alternatives to sheep grazing. “I can see George’s
point and I can see the value of some reforestation,” says Mr. Boardman.
“But what he is proposing isn’t minimal or sensitive change. It’s a
wholesale change, and pretty impractical in terms of public policy.”
Mr.
Monbiot acknowledges the antiquity of sheep-keeping in Britain. But the
subjugation of the uplands by sheep, he says, only really got going
around the 17th century, as the landlords enclosed the countryside,
evicted poor farmers, and cleared away the forests from the hillsides
and moorlands, particularly in Scotland. Britain is, he writes,
inexplicably choosing “to preserve a 17th-century cataclysm.” The sheep
wouldn’t be in the uplands at all, he adds, without annual taxpayer
subsidies, which average £53,000 per farm in Wales.
He
proposes an end to this artificial foundation for the “agricultural
hegemony,” to be replaced by a more lucrative economy of walking and
wildlife-based activities. He also argues for bringing wolves back to
Britain, for reasons both scientific (“to reintroduce the complexity and
trophic diversity in which our ecosystems are lacking”) and romantic
(wolves are “inhabitants of the more passionate world against which we
have locked our doors”). But he acknowledges that it would be foolish to
force rewilding on the public. “If it happens, it should be done with
the consent and active engagement of the people who live on and benefit
from the land.”
Elsewhere
in Europe, the sheep are in full bleating retreat, and the wolves are
resurgent. Shepherds and small farmers are abandoning marginal land at
an annual rate of roughly a million hectares, or nearly 4,000 square
miles, according to Wouter Helmer, co-founder of the group Rewilding
Europe. That’s half a Massachusetts every year left open for the
recovery of native species.
Wolves
returned to Germany around 1998, and they have been spotted recently in
the border areas of Belgium, the Netherlands and Denmark. In France,
the sheep in a farming region just over two hours from Paris suffered at
least 22 reported wolf attacks last year. But environmentalists there
say farmers would do better protesting against dogs, which they say kill
100,000 sheep annually. Wolves are now a protected species across
Europe, where their population quadrupled after the 1970s. Today an
estimated 11,500 wolves roam there.
Lynx,
golden jackals, European bison, moose, Alpine ibex and even wolverines
have also rebounded, according to a recent study commissioned by
Rewilding Europe. Mr. Helmer says his group aims to develop ecotourism
on an African safari model, with former shepherds finding new employment
as guides. That may sound naïve. But he sees rewilding as a realistic
way to prosper as the European landscape develops along binary lines,
with urbanized areas and intensive agriculture on one side and wildlife
habitat with ecotourism on the other.
In
northern Scotland, Paul Lister is working on an ecotourism scheme to
bring back wolves and bears on his Alladale Wilderness Reserve, where he
has already planted more than 800,000 native trees. He still needs
government permission to keep predators on a proposed 50,000-acre fenced
landscape. That’s a long way from introducing them to the wild, on the
model of Yellowstone National Park. Even so, precedent suggests that it
will be a battle.
Though
beavers are neither big nor bad, a recent trial program to reintroduce
them to the British countryside caused furious public protest. (One
writer denounced “the emotion-based obsession with furry mammals of the
whiskery type.”) And late last year, when five wolves escaped from the
Colchester Zoo, authorities quickly shot two of them dead. A police
helicopter was deployed to hunt and kill another, and a fourth was
recaptured. Prudently, the fifth wolf slunk back into its cage,
defeated.
Rewilding?
At least for now, Britain once again stands alone (well, alone with its
30 million sheep) against the rising European tide.
Richard Conniff is the author of “The Species Seekers: Heroes, Fools, and the Mad Pursuit of Life on Earth.”
12 comments:
Mr. Monbiot is an example of someone who is pushing for a paradigm shift in his country when it comes to sheep. He wants a change and he wants it to be immediate in order to preserve his countries land. His opposers argue that the sheep bring in such revenue that it is ignorant to reduce or remove them. This is an example of weak sustainability. They are willing to use up all of their resources, or natural capital, now in order to create manmade capital (money). Through this capital created now they would be able to enhance technology in order to survive in the future. Monbiot comes across as a supporter of strong sustainability because he is more concerned with preserving and conserving natural capital than he is in money.
What I think this entire article is overlooking is that every keystone species at one time or another was an invasive species. Ecosystems are always evolving. Prey and predators, populations and species are always fluctuating. So for Mr. Monbiot to state that by removing the sheep it will allow for nature to go back to the way it was, is an absurd thought. At what point could you ever say that this was land in its original state? The 17th century? the 1st century?
Ultimately this article shows the main argument that comes when the environment is involved; Which is more important, money or nature? Up until recent decades this was no question, but as population increases and resources decrease this issue must be addressed.
Nick Sollogub
This article raises an issue that all environmentalists seem to face, profit or the protection of the natural world. I understand the issue of overgrazing and how detrimental it can be to a habitat, however Mr. Monbiot is asking for a change that may be too drastic for England. I think there can be a compromise between eliminating the sheep from the area and keeping them from degrading the land. Mr Monbiot is trying to label a profitable species as invasive and I don't believe he is going to be successful.
Dillon Addonizio
The problematic lack of predatory animals exists world wide. Each country or region wasting time debating on what should be deemed more important. The two sides being habitat and species diversity versus monetary gain. As long as profit is held as a measure for success there is very little hope for the environment in which we belong. There is one earth and it must be saved. With this mentality reintroducing predators is without question allowing habitat and species diversity to be regulated as it should be. Given the right circumstances nature will self regulate as it has always done. This idea should be implemented throughout each country and not just in natural parks or concentrated areas. Education is the key to ensure less problems between human society and "reconstructed" habitats.
There is good and bad to the idea of rewilding, while it can help in the process of creating more biodiversity and can help with species control, safety, especially in this particular case, is of great concern. Bringing wolves back into an area where people are not used to having them could cause a great deal of safety concerns for the people that live there, therefore I don’t know how I can entirely support that idea.
That being said, if the sheep population is causing damage to a National Park Area, an area that is supposed to be protected by the government in the first place, then certainly I think that the people of Britain need to be paying attention to it. Yes, the sheep industry brings income to the country, and has for a long time, but if the population of sheep is destroying the lands on which they live, how are the sheep going to continue living there anyways? If the problem continues, then the sheep will no longer be able to live in the wasteland they created, let alone any other species, and it will be very hard for the vegetation and life to grow back the way that it used to be before the sheep arrived, which could be a major economical setback for them in the future.
Even though the cut back on the industry might bring a set back to their economy in the short run, in the long run, it is economically beneficial because tourism and other things devoted to the sheer beauty of the place could be used instead of over-farming a species that is hurting the natural environment. They can’t expect to overuse their provided resources and have no set back from it, even if the sheep is a cultural icon.
Leanna Molnar
I would have to agree that in theory, rewilding in Britain could be an overall constructive process, in that it would help to promote and improve biodiversity while simultaneously eliminating or at least minimizing the issue of overgrazing. However, by definition, the reintroduction of a species of wild animals can be quite a difficult topic to wrestle with when taking into consideration the security of the people who live in the specific area of interest.
John Muir once said, “Nature’s object in making animals and plants might possibly be first of all the happiness of each one of them, not the creation of all for the happiness of one.” I believe this quote can offer a solution to the controversy faced by the idea of rewilding in Britain. In order to restore the grasslands and also keep the UK sheep industry afloat, there needs to be some sort of equilibrium between nature and the people. They should not replace sheep with wolves only to begin restoration of the deforested uplands and a National park, but at the same time the multitude of sheep should not be ignored for the opportunity of maximizing production and profit. I don’t believe that you have to pick one side or the other and I think that is where the main problem lies. If the people who support the environment and the people who support the UK sheep industry could come together and find a middle ground, I think they would find that their problems would start to dissolve.
Gina May
The article highlights a conflict that happens across all the disciplines of environmentalism; the industry's negative effect on the natural ecosystem, but the positive effect on the industry that supports thousands of people. Mr. Monbiot takes the classical environmental scope, that protecting the ecosystem is of the utmost importance, and at any cost to industry or the societies that these industries build. Although I do agree with some of the points that Mr. Monbiot makes, I do think he could have been more specific in his claims to bring the ecosystem back to "how it use to be". Since ecosystems naturally change over time, and the fact that sheep have been herded for human's needs for thousands of years, I think Mr. Monbiot could have been more specific in his aims; thus, I do not agree with the claim all of the sheep should be removed, but I find it of the utmost importance to return this ecosystem to a more sustainable state than it is presently.
-Dylan Hirsch
Mr. Monbiot's idea of rewinding posses a question that we have been faced with for decades; continue boosting our economy or save our planet? In my opinion, Mr. Monbiot's proposal of rewilding, though it may benefit the environment, seems unrealistic. Although reducing the number of sheeps in the UK would help nature from being destroyed, I don't feel increasing the number of wolf's would do any better. Sheeps have been around Britain for a long while therefore most people know how to treat and care for them. Also, there is a possibility that these people have never been in close contact with wolfs so the safety and security of the citizens in the community might been in danger.
Also, if we do as Mr. Monbiot suggest and get rid of all the sheep, where will they continue living? I do believe that there is a sufficient way to help nature rebuild itself from the "damage" sheeps have caused, however, Mr. Monbiot's way of doing it will ultimately fail.
Mr.Monbiot's article displays the opposite sides of the environmental issue. He uses the interesting topic of sheep to describe how willing people are to use up the available resources in order to make a profit. While there is much opposition to the elimination of the sheep population from Britain, Monbiot makes a convincing argument. Rewilding the area would not only benefit the environment, but it would open up opportunities for new forms of income. Ecotourism is beneficial to all. It would provide jobs while bringing in more money from tourism. Tours would also raise awareness about rewilding and environmental preservation.
-Haylei P
This article brings up the usual "profit or nature?". I believe that Mr. Monbiot can compromise and achieve his goal in many different ways that are less extreme. I see his point of view and I understand that it might hurt the economy but it would be beneficial in the long run and for the greater picture.
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