Here Are 5 Animals That Need To Be Reintroduced To The UK

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Here Are 5 Animals That Need To Be Reintroduced To The UK! I'd love to see them all back! would be wicked
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Комментарии • 86

  • @WildlifeWithCookie
    @WildlifeWithCookie  Год назад +15

    Do you agree with the animals I mentioned?

    • @jackshistory9378
      @jackshistory9378 Год назад +1

      As much as I’d like to see wolves and bears and lynx I just don’t see it happening in the uk. It’s not practical. Think we should focus on birds and small mammals. However I’d love to see you talk about European bison and great bustards, as their both kinda back in the uk.

    • @jackshistory9378
      @jackshistory9378 Год назад

      Apologies didn’t see the bison until later 😂

    • @ozziesfantasticanimals4455
      @ozziesfantasticanimals4455 Год назад

      Hi cookie I have found a video of the Tasmanian Tiger it looks very realistic and I think you should see It is called Tasmanian tiger filmed in central Tasmania 2012

    • @theirishninja8199
      @theirishninja8199 Год назад

      Country has too much population for any of these animals sadly
      Cars would be wrecking over moose and bison everyday
      And I love wolves but they would kill dogs everywhere 😂none of its practical anymore sadly
      Ireland maybe but in the uk it’s already too built up and the populations are too wide spread

    • @bjrnjohanhumblen525
      @bjrnjohanhumblen525 Год назад

      @@jackshistory9378 Lynx would have plenty of food in Britain without taking sheep. They live in city areas, around the cities without bunnies and hares in Norway and still survive. While the British isles have had problems with too much bunnies

  • @larsbjrnson3101
    @larsbjrnson3101 Год назад +28

    I live in moose, wolf and lynx part of country in Norway and the problems you would face of reintroduce moose are they follow routes 1000's of years old. We have signs on these routes so we know were to be observant in traffic. In britain they would be like cows loose in traffic I think. The wolves and lynx would be a great addition for you I think. Btw, the moose kill people the wolf and lynx don't.

    • @cluelessgod97
      @cluelessgod97 Год назад +6

      Which would shock many to learn.
      Surprisingly on the most part the Predators keep relatively hidden, but moose. Man I've seen a few vids of aggressive ones I'd be more inclined to carry protection for a Moose over the Wolves/lynx.

    • @colinharbinson8284
      @colinharbinson8284 Год назад +1

      Probably, also too late for wolves, this a small overpopulated island.

    • @striderwhiston9897
      @striderwhiston9897 Год назад

      @@colinharbinson8284 Maybe not in Scotland, I'd say too late for Wales and England, although there are still efforts to restore habitats.

    • @calchemist21
      @calchemist21 Год назад +2

      Lynx 100%. Wolves id personally say abit more debate is needed

    • @larsbjrnson3101
      @larsbjrnson3101 Год назад

      @@calchemist21 Just watch wolf reintroduced to Yellowstone.

  • @kigglestraw4987
    @kigglestraw4987 Год назад +2

    I dont think moose should be reintroduced because not enough room and they are too dangerous and unpredictable with other animals like wolves there's measures but moose if you run into one you will be attacked and probably killed that's my opinion tho

  • @michaelafrancis1361
    @michaelafrancis1361 Год назад +5

    One creature that really should be considered for reintroduction is the burbot (Lota lota). This fish is the only freshwater member of the cod family. It was once so common in England (particularly the Norfolk Broads) that folks fed them to their pigs. The last one seen in the UK was in 1970 from the Great Ouse Relief Channel although some people think that there may be still survivors in Norfolk or Yorkshire. It is still reasonably common and widespread in Europe and as a likely extinct indigenous species it must surely be a candidate for reintroduction.

  • @robertobromilow1483
    @robertobromilow1483 Год назад +3

    Wolves would just be unthinkable in the uk wild. We are a small island nation and the problem this would cause not only in urban areas and motorways, but farmland and Greater outdoors. They do not fit in with our current ecosystem anymore and it wouldn’t be fair on the wolves either. Romantic idea but advantageous and irresponsible if that ever went forward. Nice video though 👍🏼

    • @Highwarrior
      @Highwarrior Год назад +2

      They definitely could survive in Scotland it’s got so much wilderness and on one of islands in the Hebrides they only went extinct in around 1888 pretty unbelievable but YEAH they definitely could survive here I don’t know about England though . And bringing back an animal like that would benefit so much to the ecosystem. And only 91% of Scotland's population live in 2% of its land area.

  • @matthewhale2464
    @matthewhale2464 Год назад +3

    Our European cousins live quite happily amongst wolves , bears, lynx et cetera us Brits seem to be total pussies when it comes to anything a bit spicy. All you Gotta do is look at the amount of objections to there being wild boar and how people complain that they might chase their dogs or dig up footpath’s

    • @rickh3714
      @rickh3714 Год назад

      " ...old lady mutilated late last night in Kent. Ooo Ooh! Ooh owoO! Re-intro'd Wolves of London "
      🐺
      courtesy Warren Zevon
      I can't remember whether it's a cow defending it's calves, a Horse, or a stag that kills the most people each yr in NZ. Dangerous dog breeds too.
      However with ALL animals considered, it's probably the honeybee! 🏃‍♂️🏃‍♂️💨🐝🐝
      Even our Katipo 🕷has only killed 2 people in 200yrs.

    • @thechelsearantman6717
      @thechelsearantman6717 Год назад

      So true I'm English and it annoys me that we are like this deers and cows are too high in the uk and we have no predators to balance the eco system here.

    • @HARRYMAGUIREANDLAKAKA
      @HARRYMAGUIREANDLAKAKA 7 месяцев назад

      Fax also most of these animals like bears and wolves are literally shy of human and only attack with cubs or provoked

  • @shapumawildcat2800
    @shapumawildcat2800 Год назад +1

    Yep bring back the Moose, bison and maybe lynx but NOT the beautiful wolves, Wolves are too cruel a killer, They would be persecuted because they would go after livestock, so not good idea.. BUT why would you want to bring back all the aforementioned animals and the wolf to kill them off,hmmmm,, Also it would bring hunters back big time, Plus people complain too many deer but the next issue would be TOO many moose etc.. Really think things should be left as they are, man has encroached too much into wild animals habitat bringing back any thing else would lead to far too many more issues all of which would end up badly for the animals

    • @HARRYMAGUIREANDLAKAKA
      @HARRYMAGUIREANDLAKAKA 7 месяцев назад

      Bro stop crying other countries deal with it so you do also and wolf are shy of humans so if they attack it your fault

  • @charleschamberlain53
    @charleschamberlain53 Год назад +1

    Take a shot every time this bloke says Wicked bet you're hammerd halfway through the video

  • @Scottmcgregor96
    @Scottmcgregor96 Год назад

    Though I'd add this list of what was here some have returned some may never return.
    (Mammals
    Straight tusked elephant 781,000.b.c to 30,000.b.c (extinct
    Auroch 400,000.b.c (extinct hunting
    European wild ass 350,000 To 300,000.b.c (extinct
    European jaguar 1.95,0000 to
    1.77,0000.b.c (extinct
    Cave lion 600,000.b.c (extinct
    european hamsters 500,000 to 300,000.b.c (change of climate
    European Hippo 100,000.b.c to 1.8,000 (extinct
    Narrow nosed rhino 40,000.b.c (extinct
    Steppe bison 36,000.b.c to 5,300.b.c (extinct
    Barbary macaque 30,000.b.c
    Scimitar Toothed cat 28,000.b.c to12,000.b.c (extinct
    European ice age leopard 26,000 to 32,000.b.c (extinct
    Cave bear 24,000.b.c to 12,000.b.c (extinct
    Polar bear 15,979 b.c (change of climate
    Cave hyena 14,000.b.c to 11,000.b.c (extinct
    Spotted hyena 11,000.b.c
    Musk ox 11,000.b.c (change of climate
    Arctic fox 11,000 b.c (change of climate
    Woolly mammoth 10,500.b.c (extinct change of climate
    Woolly rhino 10,000.b.c (extinct
    Saiga antelope 10,000.b.c (change of climate
    Pika 10,000 (change of climate
    Arctic lemming 8000.b.c (change of climate
    norway lemming 8000.b.c (change of climate
    European Forest reindeer 8000.b.c (change of climate
    Narrow headed vole 8,000.b.c (change of climate
    Irish elk 7,700.b.c (extinct change of climate
    Wolverine 6000.b.c (hunting
    European bison 3000.b.c (change of climate
    European moose 2500.b.c to 800.b.c (change of climate, vegetation, hunting and fragmentation of their environment
    Tundra vole 1500.b.c (change of climate
    Wild boar 1400.b.c (hunting
    Walrus 1000.b.c
    European lynx 400.a.d (deforestation and persecution
    European brown bear 1000.a.d (gradual and persistent hunting, alongside the loss of its forest habitat
    European beaver 1526.a.d (hunting
    Grey whale 1610.a.d (hunting
    European grey Wolf 1680.a.d (hunting
    Tarpan/Exmoor pony/heck horse (change of climate
    (Birds
    European eagle owl 8000.b.c (hunting
    Dalmatian pelican 1000.b.c (drainage of wetlands, alongside hunting and disturbance
    Lanner falcon 1236.a.d-1300.a.d (Change of climate
    European crane 1300.a.d to 1500.a.d
    (Little egret 1300.a.d to 1500.a.d
    (White stork 1416.a.d (hunting and the loss of watery habitats
    (European griffon vulture 1519 to 1600.a.d (change of climate
    (European spoonbill 1601.a.d to 1700.a.d
    (Western capercaillie 1780.a.d (
    (Western marsh harrier 1801 to 1900 (hunting
    (Northern goshawk 1801 to 1900 (hunting
    (Pie avocet 1801 to 1900
    (Great bustard 1801 to 1900 (hunting
    (Kentish plover 1901 to 2000
    (White tailed sea eagle 1916 (hunting
    (Osprey 1916 (hunting
    Cory's shearwater
    Manx shearwater
    Northern Hawk owl
    (Reptiles
    European pond terrapin
    (Amphibians
    Agile frog 1000.a.d
    Moor frog 1000.a.d
    Pool frog 1999
    (Insect
    Blue stag beetle 1801 to 1900
    Dung beetle

  • @Rudyn_nature
    @Rudyn_nature Год назад

    Wolf, lnyx, bears would fit well to a healthy ecosystem. But the problem is they really should talk with land owners and the peoples who live near to the release site, also do meeting, arguing nights, and program where they can show the newest studies. And also consider ate every aspects of the release. If an animal capable killing a baby lamb it would be feared by the local farmers and the fear will grow if they not lived together with the animal for centuries and what they know are mostly from stories. Althought may the animal will never reach their property the fear is there. In most country european lynxes very rarely kill livestock. But in Northern Europe where is a more healthy and larger lynx population, they kill livestocks and farmers generally bring up this datas. It funny bc in Hungary the big predators ( expect large bird of preys) only came back in the last 30 years. Farmers are not fear eagles bc they live together with them and they know that its very rare that an eagle kill a lamb, they also not fear lynx bc its rarely seen and timid and onyl can be found in closed forests. But if they hear wolf!!! They had a meeting with Transylvanian farmers whose Just laughed at wolf bc they count in it but Transylvanian farmers were more afraid of bears then wolfs. Also there are several solution for predators: compensation, free ancient sheperd and animal guarding dog breeds, and also 5 lined electrick fence. And another animal would be fit in UK the Aurochs like cattles.

  • @Scottmcgregor96
    @Scottmcgregor96 Год назад

    I agree with all except bison and Reindeer as this first is Invasive we did have bison but we had the Caucasus bison or steppe bison which is extinct the second is native but when extinct due to change in climate not coz of humans same with polar bear. I also think Wolverine and Walrus. I would love to see brown bears come back but I don't think it will happen nore do I think wolf or lynx will due to agriculture the lynx program has been pushed back 3 time due to farmer's stating there toich of a threat to livestock then here's an idea if you got money to buy land livestock and state of the art agriculture machinery then you can afford to put and electric fence around the edge of your land.

  • @timmywood9677
    @timmywood9677 Год назад

    I agree bringing those animals back to the UK. But one animal would take care of the deer 🦌 problem would be mountain lions but I’m not shear if they are native

  • @IAmTheOnlyMrDaryl
    @IAmTheOnlyMrDaryl 15 минут назад

    Wicked video

  • @sonnyhutchins3141
    @sonnyhutchins3141 Год назад +1

    you need to go to bearwood in bristol it has all the animals that used to be here in the u. k. like bears walls links and wolverines all in like a big open space

  • @danahume4598
    @danahume4598 Месяц назад

    Bears don't belong in the UK
    Wolves and lynx do

  • @isaacvokes666
    @isaacvokes666 7 месяцев назад

    Instead of wolf I would rather have a lynx because they are less likely to kill humans

  • @zakhopewell2294
    @zakhopewell2294 Месяц назад

    Bison recently got released in Blean woods so if you go there you could see them

  • @quintontarlton
    @quintontarlton Год назад

    No because if it's extinct on the island it's more than likely it's an extinct subspecies.

  • @leekavanagh7318
    @leekavanagh7318 23 дня назад

    Bring back the Lynx

  • @alanduncan9204
    @alanduncan9204 Год назад +1

    Norway - 385,000 sq Km. Sweden - 528,000 sq Km, Finland - 338,000 sq km and Bonnie Scotland only has 77,000 which includes hundreds of wee island and 6.8 million sheep and 180,000 cows. That is the reason you can't have Moose or Wolves and Bears roaming around. We do not have the room or enough "proper" food. No matter how cool it is or how "wicked" they look.

  • @paulneachell1117
    @paulneachell1117 10 месяцев назад

    I wan moose and lions back deer are boring

  • @Specogecko
    @Specogecko Год назад +1

    Funny that in North America we call wapiti, elk, and what you call elk we call moose.

  • @EricWoodyVariety59
    @EricWoodyVariety59 Год назад +1

    North America's largest which is number three in the World is the Great Grey Owl. Moose would be good to reintroduce, wolves, lynx, the Actic fox would be good and the scottish wildcat also the european bison. Goodluck with the reintroductions. bring the wild back to its greatness.

  • @joaoalmeidawild
    @joaoalmeidawild Год назад +1

    Great Video as always! I would love to see UK have some king of apex predators again, the Ecossystem right there, really really need them!

  • @jackshistory9378
    @jackshistory9378 Год назад +1

    I think lynx mainly hunt smaller animals. Like birds and small mammals, with deer being a rare meal. Like a baby deer.

    • @archielilley9568
      @archielilley9568 11 месяцев назад

      Wrong, lynxes favourite thing to hunt is roe deer and with such an abundance in the uk it wouldn’t be too hard of a meal

  • @nicholastate5012
    @nicholastate5012 Год назад +1

    Super interesting, would be class to see some of these reintroduced.

  • @jacobparker8410
    @jacobparker8410 Год назад

    Good job cookie

  • @EricWoodyVariety59
    @EricWoodyVariety59 Год назад

    I hate to dissapoint you but the Eurasian Eagle owl (Bubo Bubo) is only the 2. largest in the World. number One in the World is the Blakiston's Fish Owl (Bubo Blakistoni) with a wing span of over 6.5 ft or six and a half feet.

  • @bjrnjohanhumblen525
    @bjrnjohanhumblen525 Год назад

    From the guardian 2008: Last seen several thousand years ago loping through the ancient forests and glens of Scotland, two moose have arrived at a remote reserve in the Highlands as part of plans to reintroduce wild animals now extinct in the UK.
    The male and female moose are part of ambitious and controversial proposals by a millionaire landowner to recreate an ancient mountain habitat, complete with wolves, lynx and brown bears roaming freely within a vast fenced-off wildlife reserve north of Inverness.
    Paul Lister, the son of the founder of the MFI furniture chain, wants to "re-wild" 50,000 acres around his 23,000 acre estate at Alladale to create a safari-style wildlife reserve. Maybe they are breeding and you can chck them out

  • @MuertaRara
    @MuertaRara Год назад +1

    Great video again :)

  • @saroruhagoswami9202
    @saroruhagoswami9202 Год назад +2

    It's time for fixing Mother Nature's wound .
    I suggest UK Wildlife Department Re-wildering with
    European Grey Wolf's 🐺, European Brown Bear 🐻, Wolverine, European Lynx, European Bison 🦬, Wild Horse 🐎 .

  • @katie8120
    @katie8120 Год назад

    That’s Scotland baby

  • @digs1223
    @digs1223 Год назад

    We don't need to reintroduce any species, let's preserve what we have.

    • @isaacvokes666
      @isaacvokes666 7 месяцев назад +1

      Thats what is being done but there is to much prey and almost 0 predators only very rare ones and the prey is overgrazing

    • @digs1223
      @digs1223 7 месяцев назад

      @@isaacvokes666 if we allowed hunting with dogs again, maybe with a limit on prey like in the US we would solve that entirely, with no negative consequences at all.

  • @muzzo23
    @muzzo23 Год назад

    I would love to see this,there's no reason with the right planning that we couldn't, it would be so beneficial, Scotlands population density is less than France and Italy who have wolves,lynx and bears.

  • @Galaxy-kp8ng
    @Galaxy-kp8ng Год назад

    I’ve said it once n I’ll say it again, find those bloody Cranes! 😂

  • @deadmonk6671
    @deadmonk6671 Год назад

    The Natural Order of Great Britain has been torn to pieces over countless centuries if not millennia, it is our duty to restore it to what it was so that the land can properly heal and recover.

  • @backgardenfarms7560
    @backgardenfarms7560 Год назад

    I actually found a golden pheasant in a local quarry I tried catching it but failed 😭

  • @harveytweats2119
    @harveytweats2119 Год назад

    Brilliant video Cookie - bringing this subject to such a wide and important audience! I'd love to speak to rewilding in depth more if you ever had video ideas?

  • @mohammadumair9497
    @mohammadumair9497 Год назад

    hi cookie this was very interesting and knowledgeable video mate.

  • @chezbugersyummy4667
    @chezbugersyummy4667 Год назад

    i think there might be some lynx in the forest of dean.Not sure though

  • @dizzyjessd
    @dizzyjessd Год назад

    Ohh there’s a golden pheasant in the woods by me :)

  • @jamescosimini8364
    @jamescosimini8364 Год назад +1

    But where? Wolves of London.

  • @jamesl2846
    @jamesl2846 Год назад

    What about dinosaurs

  • @jayuppercase3398
    @jayuppercase3398 Год назад

    It's amazing how people think they can sit wolves down and communicate to them not to eat the slow moving sheep that are confined in that field, who literally cant escape, but instead go out and try to find a deer.....
    There are even people wanting to have wolves reintroduced in Ireland, a tiny country with practically no ancient forests.
    Just seems to be a form of virtue signalling by people who occasionally visit/drive through the countryside

  • @apollolouisehart
    @apollolouisehart Год назад +1

    Amazing hun I completely agree bring them all back big cats the lot

  • @matthewhale2464
    @matthewhale2464 Год назад

    You should move to Scotland, save yourself petrol money.🤣

    • @WildlifeWithCookie
      @WildlifeWithCookie  Год назад

      Bro honestly I’m thinking about it 😂😂😂

    • @Eggyfart83
      @Eggyfart83 Год назад

      Plenty of places to watch salmon spawning in the small burns in Scotland right now it's great to watch. I'm lucky enough to have a burn close to my house

  • @Heccy_weccy
    @Heccy_weccy Год назад +1

    Hi cookie 🙂 in case your looking for a golden pheasant you might have some luck up here were I live in the outskirts of Newcastle. Now last year me and my mum were down by a duck pond when we came upon two photographers who showed us a photo of a femal golden pheasant that was supposedly in the area. The area is shibbton pond local nature reserve, although this was a year ago so don't get your hopes up. As far as other wildlife goes you won't see anything more exiting than the odd roe deer and heron but you could go to the Derwent walk for that which isn't too far away where you can see foxes,willow tits,deer, badgers, dragonflies, a kingfisher (if you're lucky) and of course an abundance of red kites.

  • @danglyballs
    @danglyballs Год назад

    I’d love to see all of these animals back in the U.K. but is there enough room for them all? Wolves need huge territories to roam and hunt so there could only be a single or possibly two packs.

    • @jayuppercase3398
      @jayuppercase3398 Год назад

      Of course there is room....just tell the wolves not to eat all the sheep....

    • @Highwarrior
      @Highwarrior Год назад

      91% of Scotland's population live in 2% of its land area Scotland has enough room lol.