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Hmm European Bison in Kent


islandgun
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2 minutes ago, ditchman said:

they have already introduced water buffalo to somewhere in east anglia...in a wet land and seems to be working well........plants and stuff not seen for decades are recovering

Wicken Fen,  I went there years ago and was interested to learn that when it was originally bought it was allowed to grow wild, [re-wilded] this had a detrimental effect and it was only when they went back to reed cutting etc that species returned, think it was the swallow tail butterfly they were most concerned about 

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1 hour ago, ditchman said:

was that in the pub or coming out of woolworths

Dudley zoo had a fine herd of North American buffalo.

You could only get Australian bison in Woolworths

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7 minutes ago, Blackpowder said:

So bison do not break wind?

 

Blackpowder

 

Exactly ! and break down trees,  In the old days people coppiced trees which allowed new growth from the woodland floor, the other point is that this re-growth is about to be consumed by other belching livestock or uprooted by iron age pigs.  so the solution to the climate crisis is, stop farmers from raising animals, re-wild/plant trees on agricultural land then when the trees have grown introduce animals to clear the land and make it into pasture

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Just now, Old farrier said:

We have a good rewilding record 

along with introducing non native species

what could ever go wrong 

grey squirrel 

coypue 

mink 

wild boar 

Freshwater turtles 

zander 

please feel free to add to the list 

It's not rewilding, BBC reporting ******** as usual. Its 1000 acres fenced in ....basically just like a zoo ***

 

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What's missing from this idealistic dream of biodiversity?  Apex predators.  There's going to be nothing in nature to thin out and control the bison population.

I'm no expert but I've got a feeling there could be too much of a good thing going on, if the effects of the bison increase exponentially as they eventually multiply.

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