RUMOURS that Defra minister Michael Gove may be prepared to fast-track a decision on lynx release have riled the National Sheep Association, which warned against his adopting a 'blasé attitude' to the matter.

Faced with the prospect that Mr Gove might wave through the reintroduction application lodged by the Lynx UK Trust, NSA has called on farming bodies and rural people to unite and voice their unanimous concerns over the prospect of the large predator returning to UK forests.

NSA chief executive Phil Stocker said: “I know Mr Gove is interested in these proposals and I am certain now is the time for individual farmers, land managers and their representative organisations to make their feelings heard. I would go as far as urging every farmer who has views over this to write to the Secretary of State so he can appreciate the strength of stakeholder concerns, which go way beyond the losses that will be suffered by sheep farmers.”

A verdict on whether lynx should be released in Kielder Forest, Northumberland, is still pending after Lynx UK Trust submitted its formal application to Natural England earlier this year. The Government advisory body is currently reviewing information, and is expected to announce a decision in the coming months.

NSA has been gathering industry and local opinion at a series of meetings in recent months, working with the National Farmers Union and British Deer Society, as well as several hundred local stakeholders involved in farming, tourism, animal welfare, land management, field sports and conservation.

Mr Stocker continued: “A connected approach, but in an individual capacity, is what is needed if we are to relay the true scale of our concerns. The risks to landscape and wildlife, heavily invested in for years, are real. Alongside disease and welfare risks, coupled with concerns around whether any lynx population could be genetically sustainable on our heavily populated island. This of course in addition to the resultant losses and stress on farmers.

“It is not a simple matter of a compensation package putting everything right," he stressed. "We know from sheep farmers in Finland, Norway and elsewhere that losses go way beyond those predicted. I simply cannot accept that the conscious release of a high-level predator is compatible with the high level of animal welfare expected of British farmers.”

With the proposed release site so close to the Scottish border, NSA has been assured that no decision would be made without agreement from relevant Scotland authorities. Mr Stocker concluded: “There can be no unilateral decision taken on this matter. With concerns in the devolved nations around a ‘power grab’ being brought about by the Great Repeal Bill, it would be unbelievable if the devolved powers of Scotland were challenged in this way."

An NSA report into the wider consequences of the introduction of Eurasian lynx to the UK countrywide can be found at www.nationalsheep.org.uk/policy-work/