George Monbiot and the Irish mink problem
Posted: Sat Oct 01, 2016 4:49 am
It's not often I take issue with the chap but he's wrong.Had these people tipped a tanker load of bleach into the headwaters of the river Finn, they would have done less damage. The effects would be horrible for a while, but the ecosystem could then begin to recover. The mink, by contrast, will remain at large for years, perhaps millennia. Like many introduced species, American mink can slash their way through the ecosystem, as they have no native predators, and their prey species haven't evolved to avoid them. Is there anything the animal lovers in Donegal could have done that would have harmed more animals?
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... introduced
If there were no animal rights activists in Donegal there would still be wild mink across the county from careless management of the existing fur farms. There are already wild mink in Donegal, they will never be removed, they are now and will remain a problem for Irish ecology. This is nothing to do with animal rights activists who have in no way worsened the already existing problem.
What they have done is shone a spotlight on fur farming in the Republic, and a good thing too. They have risked their personal freedom to do so. They should be applauded, the Irish Republic should close the farms down immediately and then, if it feels like making a futile gesture doomed to failure, attempt to clear up the already existing wild mink.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... introduced
If there were no animal rights activists in Donegal there would still be wild mink across the county from careless management of the existing fur farms. There are already wild mink in Donegal, they will never be removed, they are now and will remain a problem for Irish ecology. This is nothing to do with animal rights activists who have in no way worsened the already existing problem.
What they have done is shone a spotlight on fur farming in the Republic, and a good thing too. They have risked their personal freedom to do so. They should be applauded, the Irish Republic should close the farms down immediately and then, if it feels like making a futile gesture doomed to failure, attempt to clear up the already existing wild mink.