21/11/2024

Snaring banned in Scotland from Monday 25th November

By Dr Nick Hesford, Head of Advisory, GWCT Scotland

A ban on snaring, introduced as part of the Wildlife Management and Muirburn (Scotland) Act 2024, will commence on Monday 25 November 2024. This means that, from this date, it will be an offence to set a snare in Scotland for the purpose of killing or restraining a wild animal.

GWCT members are advised to ensure all snares currently set or deactivated on site are removed immediately. As the ban does not extend to the possession of snares, it will not be necessary to destroy or hand in any snares. However, as current snaring legislation remains in place, we urge members to retain all records of past snaring activities until further notice.

The GWCT were involved in the development and trialling of the Humane Cable Restraint. We demonstrated its efficacy and humaneness in our research and gave evidence to the Scottish Government and to the Scottish Parliament’s Rural Affairs Committee to that effect. We deplore the loss of this vital tool for conservation and wildlife management.

In order to avoid similar bans in the future, it is now more important than ever that all remaining methods of legal predator control are carried out to highest standards of professionalism and animal welfare. Training in spring trapping and corvid trapping is now mandatory.

The GWCT pioneered this kind of training and the current NatureScot syllabus has been developed with the GWCT using our existing material. We have been running approved training courses will start this autumn, and have recently added dates for 2025 and places can be booked here.

Moreover, in carrying out legal predator control, it is becoming increasingly important to be able to demonstrate adherence to best practice. The GWCT have developed the Best Practice with Proof initiative, which allows land managers to collect data on the ground, which are then evaluated in detailed annual reports. We also offer Predator Control Assessments as a bespoke external audit of all relevant predator control methods. More details about these services can be found here.

GWCT research has repeatedly demonstrated the benefits of legal humane predator control for game and wildlife. As an organisation, we remain committed to ensuring that this form of wildlife management has a future in Scotland.

Comments

Ban on Fox Snaring

at 16:36 on 18/12/2024 by Michael O Reilly

I need to add to my previous comments The fox is top of the food chain , and has no natural predators Ground nesting birds will be wiped out . Any caught in illegal snares will suffer Is the time right to consider introducing 1080 This product can only be used after attending a 1 day training course and the user will issued with a permit to use the product It is a safe product and is sented specially for the fox Is burried into the ground at a depth of approximately 4 to 5 inches and only the Fox will pick up the cent and dig it up Michael O Reilly

Snare ban

at 14:46 on 18/12/2024 by Michael O Reilly

This ban will lead to the use of illegal Snares been used to control the Fox population The farmer will end up making his own snares This will result in the death of what ever gets caught in the snare The wild brown hare will be eradicated They suggest night shooting , this is avery dangerous practice The purpose of snaring is to control the fox population not elimination Regards Michael O Reilly

Snaring ban

at 11:25 on 18/12/2024 by WBW

Yet another ill conceived idea implemented by a government so far removed from rural issue's that if it weren't so catastrophically serious for wildlife , it would be seen as a joke !!

Snare Ban in Scotland

at 11:30 on 26/11/2024 by Keith Williams

There is no mention in the legislation of the use of hand snares for poaching Game fish in Rivers. Its a practise that must also be raised to compliment present fisheries legislation where snares are actually Prohibited from such use in England and Wales. Snares are the most commonly used instrument for of poaching salmon and Sea Trout across all the Rivers of Wales as past prosecution records will divulge and therefore there is need to regulate the sales pnly to bona fide users and not those without any pest control, farm or agricultural association.

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