Paul Wilkinson, Head of Living Landscape for The Wildlife Trusts, said:
“It is a sad day for the natural world. We deeply regret that badger culls are proceeding despite the strength of scientific and public opinion against them. No Wildlife Trust will allow culling on its land.
“Although we may not agree with this decision, indeed we disagree strongly with it, we shall continue to engage in two way dialogue with everyone on this issue. Anyone who feels duty bound to protest is urged to do so peacefully and respectfully, to the countryside and to the farming community.
Simon Nash, Chief Executive of Somerset Wildlife Trust, said:
“We are very conscious of the hardship that bTB causes our farming community. However science clearly shows that a badger cull is not the solution to bTB and, in fact, the shooting of badgers could make the problem worse here in Somerset. This cull is a distraction and gets in the way of implementing the right mechanisms to control this disease through improved biosecurity and the roll out of cattle and badger vaccines – a view shared by many landowners here in Somerset.”
Roger Mortlock, Chief Executive of Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust, the first non-Government organisation in England to launch a badger vaccination programme, said:
"The focus on free shooting badgers at the expense of other solutions to eradicating Bovine TB is polarising communities in Gloucestershire. We've invested in badger vaccination to demonstrate that there is another way. We believe this approach could easily be scaled up and are keen to work with local landowners looking for an alternative to culling.”