RSPB Spotlight: Badgers
By James Lowen
()
About this ebook
Badgers are elusive wanderers of the night and few mammals are as mysterious. Their nocturnal lifestyle meansnot many of us have ever glimpsed their monochrome form as they sniff and bustle their way through woodland or across pasture – yet most of us live far closer to a Badger group than we might think. In Spotlight: Badgers James Lowen explores all aspects of their lives including their communal living, feeding habits, as well as the major threats to and conservation support for Badgers.
These iconic omnivores are widely represented in folklore and have permeated our popular culture. Generations of children have been entranced by Badger in Kenneth Grahame's book Wind in the Willows, however these determined yet mostly peaceful animals have also been loathed and persecuted for centuries. Badger baiting is thankfully now illegal, but the legal badger cull introduced in 2011 in parts of Gloucestershire and Somerset remains in place following the 2015 general election.
With so much politics surrounding Badgers in the UK, it's not easy to get unbiassed information. In RSPB Spotlight: Badgers James Lowen keeps a neutral tone on the debate about Badger culling. He describes the history, from the first Badger found to be infected with bTB in 1972 and the subsequent gassing of setts from 1975 to 1982. He also outlines the RSPB's stance on the Badger cull. As one of the UK's largest landowners, the RSPB oppose Badger culling on their land, in favour of vaccination, cattle testing, bio-security and movement controls.
James Lowen
James Lowen is an experienced naturalist and award-winning author whose books include Much Ado About Mothing, British Moths, Birds of France and Bloomsbury's RSPB Spotlights on Badgers and Hedgehogs. Two of his books received the accolade of Travel Guidebook of the Year, and James also writes for publications such as The Telegraph, BBC Wildlife, Nature's Home and The Countryman. jameslowen.com / @JLowenWildlife
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RSPB Spotlight - James Lowen
Contents
Meet the Badgers
Body Beautiful
Breeding and Growth
Social Life and Communication
Food, Home and Habits
Threats and Conservation
Badgers and People
Badger Fun
Watching Badgers
Glossary
Acknowledgements
Further Reading and Resources
Image Credits
The flaring stripes of the Badger’s head pattern render the mammal unmistakable.
Meet the Badgers
Beloved by generations of children entranced by Kenneth Grahame’s book The Wind in the Willows, few mammals appear as mysterious as the Badger. Because of its nocturnal lifestyle, not many of us have ever been lucky enough to even glimpse its monochrome form as it sniffs and bustles its way through woodland or across pasture. The closest we believe we get to these determined mammals is through their cultural proxies – yet most of us live far nearer to a Badger group than we might think.
The Badger’s iconic face features in advertising campaigns and on logos.
Whether we have seen one or not, we all know what a Badger – formally, the Eurasian Badger – looks like. A head striped with black and white has made the Badger iconic. It is the face of marketing campaigns and logos, from the UK’s Wildlife Trusts, to beer and ink. As an avatar, brand, book illustration or newspaper photograph, the Badger is familiar to us all. Yet few of us have ever seen one alive.
In general the only time we clap eyes on a Badger is when we see a cylindrical, motionless lump on the roadside − a victim of our motorised existence. We lead separate lives, our paths crossing only in death. The Badger’s dark world seems largely parallel to ours. This seems bizarre when we have cohabited in Europe for tens of thousands of years – and the Badger has made its mark in our landscape and language, our place names and culture.
A typical view of a Badger at night, snuffling through woodland.
There is much about the Badger that we admire and with which we even feel a certain communion. Stoic when faced with adversity and tenacious in defending family and home, the Badger is a battler. Somehow Badgers survive everything humans throw at them, whether this is altering the environment, baiting them with dogs or persecuting them for their role in transmitting disease. We respect Badgers and identify with them − yet we also hound them. We know of the Badger, yet cannot claim to know it. We are ignorant of the Badger’s way of life, and confused by how we are supposed to feel about it. This book seeks to change all that.
A scientific family tree
Even experts can get things wrong. The grandfather of taxonomy – the science of classifying creatures – was a Swedish naturalist called Carl Linnaeus. In the mid-18th century, Linnaeus completed the first ever attempt to classify and name all living life forms. Many of his allocations have stood the test of time and are still used today. One notable exception, however, was what we know today as the Eurasian Badger Meles meles, which Linnaeus considered to be a form of bear!
Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish scientist who created the current system of naming and classifying plants, animals and fungi.
With its shaggy coat, long claws and bumbling gait, there is admittedly something bear-like about the Badger. But the bumbling Brock is actually part of the mustelid or weasel family, whose European members include the Otter, Stoat and Pine Marten.
In a rare (but understandable) mistake, Carl Linnaeus classified the Badger (right) as a relative of the Brown Bear (left).
Mustelidae are the largest family in the order Carnivora, which comprises carnivorous mammals. Mustelids are thought to have first evolved 40 million years ago, and today’s representatives are descended from mammals that appeared 15 million years ago. To put those dates in perspective, the precursors of our own species, Homo sapiens, emerged from an ape-like ancestor as recently as 5–7 million years ago.
Badgers are a branch within the mustelid (or weasel) family, which has been around in its current form for 15 million years – more than twice as long as our own species, Homo sapiens.
What’s in a name?
There are different suggestions for the origin of the word ‘badger’. It could come from the French bêcheur, meaning ‘digger’. However, the French word for the Badger, blaireau, means ‘corn hoarder’, presumably in recognition of one of the mammal’s favourite foods. Alternatively, the name may be derived from ‘badge’ in recognition of the mammal’s banded face − its distinctive emblem amid the ink of night.
Across Britain there are also ‘country’ names for the Badger. The best known is Brock, which is often used in children’s stories and comes from broc, a word of Celtic origin and a reference to the mammal’s largely grey colouration. There are perhaps 140 Anglo-Saxon place names with their origin in broc, from Brockley to Brockenhurst. Another common moniker, particularly in northern England, is Pate. Rarer are Grey and Bawson. The first is presumably a reference to the coat’s apparent colour, while the second may have evolved from an Old French word, bauçant, meaning ‘pied’.
Possible origins of the word ‘Badger’ include the badge of its banded face (above) or the French bêcheur, meaning ‘digger’ (right).
In German, Badger is Dachs; in Dutch, it is das. The Latin root for Badger, taxo, lives on in the mammal’s names in Portugal (teixugo), Italian (tasso), Spanish (tejón) and Catalan (toixó). The Norwegian grevling honours the Badger’s proficiency at digging, with a similar etymology in Danish and Swedish. Further east Badgers are ascribed names of contrasting resonance: vjedhulle in Albanian (meaning ‘thief’) and huan in Chinese (a homophone for ‘happiness’).
A colloquial English name for Badger, Bawson, may derive from an Old French word for ‘pied’, bauçant.
The UK’s mustelids
Mustelids roam across every continent bar Antarctica and Australasia. Most are agile and active mammals, always alert to the next hunting opportunity. They have evolved to occupy varied ecological niches, from wetlands to woodland and tunnels to trees. As befits members of the order Carnivora, most are skilful and strong predators. Stoats, for example, are not deterred by their favourite prey – Rabbits – being twice their size. Sea Otters are one of the few mammals to have learnt how to use tools to access their food, in their case stones to break open shellfish.
With the exception of the Red Fox and Scottish Wildcat, all of the UK’s carnivores are mustelids. They occur in a variety of shapes and sizes.
• Badger The UK’s largest mustelid is widespread and lives underground in setts. Although rarely seen, it is as familiar to us as a Fox, largely because of its place in British culture.
• Otter With webbed feet, muscular tail and streamlined body, Otters are superbly adapted for a life in water. Although typically secretive, Otters have made a dramatic comeback and are increasingly spotted along our rivers.
Otters are a primarily aquatic mustelid.
• Stoat Short-legged and slender-bodied, Stoats are experts at hunting small mammals underground. In some populations their fur turns white in winter, when they become known as Ermine.
• Weasel This is a smaller version of the Stoat − indeed, it is the UK’s smallest carnivore − with a comparatively stubby tail. Weasels are constantly on the move, and need to eat one-third of their body weight every day simply to stay alive.
Weasels are a diminutive, short-tailed version of the stoat.
• Pine Marten This cat-sized carnivore is a mustelid Jack of all trades, being as agile climbing trees as it is adept at swimming or hunting along the ground. Within the UK it is largely confined to Scotland, so seeing this chocolate-coated mammal makes for a red-letter day.
Pine Martens are the most arboreal of British mustelids.
• Polecat This is a large, dark version of a Stoat, with a bandit mask across its eyes. Polecat populations are increasing and spreading from their stronghold in Wales. A major threat is hybridisation with escaped domestic ferrets, the offspring of which (‘polecat-ferrets’) are more abundant than their wild relative.
Polecats are spreading east from their core range in Wales.
• American Mink As its name suggests, this voracious predator should not be in the UK at all. Imported to be bred commercially for its fur, deliberately released animals and escaped convicts have spread countrywide and wrought