10/07/21 Farming Today This Week: birds, pigs, cages, predators and Thomas Hardy
Farmland birds are in long term decline, hit largely by changes in the way we farm. Do predators need to be controlled to help protect them?
From turtle dove to stone curlews, many species of farmland birds are in long term decline, hit largely by changes in the way we farm. But some are thriving and there are hopes that the new public money for public goods payments to farmers can build on those successes. We hear calls for predators, like foxes and crows, to be controlled to help protect ground nesting birds.
The European Union has pledged to phase out cages for agricultural animals and birds. It follows the European Parliamentβs vote to ban cages, which in turn followed a long running campaign and petition signed by 1.4 million people. The Government here is currently βexamining the evidenceβ around the issue - so where will this leave the UKβs claim to have the highest animal welfare standards?
And we answer a question about Thomas Hardy and sheep bloat.
Presented by Charlotte Smith and produced by Beatrice Fenton.
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- Sat 10 Jul 2021 06:30ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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Farming Today
The latest news about food, farming and the countryside