| BADGER: mighty burrower
needs to keep its head down again
POWERFULLY built, yet shy and elusive, the badger is an animal which
sparks almost as much controversy and debate in the countryside as the
fox.
Strong claws, big forearms, and a muscular, streamlined body mean the
badger is perfectly designed for digging and living unseen underground.
Its tendency to exist in large family groups has also added to its ability
to thrive despite the urbanisation of much of the country. Badger baiting
- where victims are often maimed even before dogs are let at them for
'entertainment' - has long been a scourge. But conservationists have
been fighting back and most counties now have groups dedicated to protecting
badgers, backed up by police and the RSPCA.
Unfortunately, badgers are under threat again from official quarters.
Renewed fears about tuberculosis being spread from badgers to cattle
recently sounded the death knell for up to 20,000 twilight foraging 'brocks'.
Protesters, many of whom think badgers are innocent of the TB charge,
are appalled that renewed slaughter of these handsome, hardy creatures
has become a feature again of the British countryside.
Meanwhile, opinion among scientists themselves remains divided on how
much, or even if, badgers are responsible for spreading TB among cattle.
But it is quite sad to reflect that some 4,500 badger setts were already wiped out
using poisoned gas between 1975 and 1982.
When you consider that an average sett can contain up to 15 animals,
parents and cubs, it is easy to imagine the scale of suffering involved.
Putting all that aside, it is not difficult to be charmed by a badger.
I have always looked upon them as mini-bears, although they are actually
from the same evolutionary tree as stoats and weasels. Nevertheless,
they have many of the same mannerisms as bears and are also omniverous.
"They'll eat almost anything," one seasoned badger watcher, Jean Beach,
told me when I called in for a chat."I've taken out lots of different
foods over the years, from peanuts to fish heads. They seem to love
it all."
Worms are the staple diet. Yet badgers will also feast on fruit, birds'
eggs, and small mammals, including - perhaps less endearingly - baby
rabbits, dug from their burrows using those formidable claws. Jean knew
the precise locations of several setts. However, not surprisingly, these
were kept a closely guarded secret.
When we spoke, Jean told me the sows were preparing to give birth so
the setts were quieter. Expectant mums often spent more time underground.
The best time to see badgers is when the youngsters emerge. This is
usually around mid-March, after a female has given birth to two or three
cubs, with weaning starting at about 12 weeks.
The last occasion I saw a badger up close myself was not a happy experience.
It was curled up beside a road, very quiet and still. Dead, in fact.
Road accidents do account for a large number, usually males roaming
the countryside in search of new territories. But roadside corpses can
also have a more sinister history. An RSPCA inspector told me that badger
baiters occasionally disposed of the evidence this way, giving a false
impression of how the animal met its end and preventing any awkward
inquiries. A carefully placed tyre tread might even reinforce the deception.
I was pretty certain the badger I found had not been baited as a close
examination revealed no tooth marks. It had few visible wounds on it
at all so I think it must have died slowly from internal injuries, which
seemed just as pitiful.
DAVID KAVANAGH
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