Right where to start? Your industry, yes I could have used others but as you know it inside out, it’s failings and success it seemed appropriate somehow.
We own up to our failings Phil, but it is a real shame that our successes are only met with scoffing and scornful comments aboutd profitability.
Take a look around your own home and see if you can identify the doubtless dozens of materials and devices that have been as a direct result of the oil and ga industry.
So to add a little balance Peter and not to tweak your tail too much, I’ll use the railways and Japanese Knotweed, which it has to be said is enemy No 1 for everybody, so its more hated than otters. The railways had a policy from the Victorians to about the 1950s of planting it on the embankment to stabilise them and stop them collapsing. In doing this, they consulted “no one,” not even the neighbours of the properties next to where it was planted. The resulting effect is, some houses now have it coming through the walls and into the livingrooms. The defence of Network Rail being it’s historic planting and the effects of it damage were unknown at the time. In sort Peter it’s the "That there was no official requirement to do so!" defence.
The same argumet ad nauseam then, so my answer would be the same as well, just because there was no regulation didn't mean that carte blanche was instigated, common sense and logic should still have been employed.
Whilst the figures suggest there has since the first report been undoubtedly an increase in otters nationally, what they are saying, and only saying is the sites checked are showing a positive increase in spraints in each transect. Not that the population has increased by X percent.
The only way that could be established is by DNA testing each spaint and Id it to each animal and that would be financially prohibitive without Govt funding for it.
So it was only the 3,300 sites tha twre checked that showed a huge increase of 58% which was up from their own point of comparison of 5.8% in 30 years, if so then I would still suggest that shows a profound increase brought about by natural breeding if we are to believe the "official" figure of only a few over 100 reintroduced Otters . . . . . .
Otters can’t reproduce profusely Peter and again I explain why in the posts I’ve referenced. In the reports you quoted the explanation is given why it was felt necessary to release otters into certain parts of the country.