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Landowner puts £1,000 bounty on beavers | Landowner puts £1,000 bounty on beavers |
(2 days later) | |
A landowner has put a £1,000 bounty on the heads of beavers he claims are felling trees on his estate. | A landowner has put a £1,000 bounty on the heads of beavers he claims are felling trees on his estate. |
Sir Benjamin Slade, owner of 17th Century Woodlands Castle in Somerset, thinks the animals migrated from the River Otter in Devon. | Sir Benjamin Slade, owner of 17th Century Woodlands Castle in Somerset, thinks the animals migrated from the River Otter in Devon. |
Sir Benjamin said: "I can't cope. I won't have any trees left." | Sir Benjamin said: "I can't cope. I won't have any trees left." |
However, a beaver expert who has visited the estate said the marks on the trees were not typical of them. | However, a beaver expert who has visited the estate said the marks on the trees were not typical of them. |
More on the beavers story, plus more Devon and Cornwall news | More on the beavers story, plus more Devon and Cornwall news |
Sir Benjamin said there were at least two beavers on his property and he fears they could start breeding. | Sir Benjamin said there were at least two beavers on his property and he fears they could start breeding. |
"Every time I go out there's another one [tree] gone down, it's terrible," he said. | "Every time I go out there's another one [tree] gone down, it's terrible," he said. |
The posters on the 12-acre Woodlands estate read: "Beaver sightings! At Woodlands Castle. Wanted dead or alive. £1,000 reward! For crimes against trees. Beavers have been cutting down our trees!" | The posters on the 12-acre Woodlands estate read: "Beaver sightings! At Woodlands Castle. Wanted dead or alive. £1,000 reward! For crimes against trees. Beavers have been cutting down our trees!" |
Natural England, which licensed a pilot beaver release on the Otter, said trapping and possessing beavers would require a licence but shooting them humanely did not. However, the group added it was "not encouraging people". | |
The Woodlands estate has requested people ask permission to kill the beavers, which are not a protected species, before going onto its land. | The Woodlands estate has requested people ask permission to kill the beavers, which are not a protected species, before going onto its land. |
However, Derek Gow, who breeds beavers in Devon, said after visiting the site he was convinced the trees had not been damaged by the animals. | However, Derek Gow, who breeds beavers in Devon, said after visiting the site he was convinced the trees had not been damaged by the animals. |
"Beavers produce distinctive scalloped chips when they gnaw trees and there weren't any," he said. | "Beavers produce distinctive scalloped chips when they gnaw trees and there weren't any," he said. |
"It looks as if it has been done by humans with an axe." | "It looks as if it has been done by humans with an axe." |
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