DOS AND
DONT'S FOR FARMERS |
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Hares like a ‘patchwork quilt’ farmland. Break up large blocks of cereal as much as possible. |
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Use set-aside
as a wildlife habitat. A series of 20-metre strips is ideal if it is
planted under the Wild Bird Cover Option. |
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On arable
farms, mown grass strips will provide summer grazing. Run them across
open fields rather than alongside hedgerows where predators may lie in
wait. |
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Hares need
quiet, undisturbed cover for raising leverets. On livestock farms
leave some areas of grass uncut and ungrazed for leverets to hide in. |
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When making
silage, cut the field from the centre outwards rather than from the
outside in, so that hares can escape the machinery into neighbouring
fields. |
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Planting game
crops for pheasants will provide cover and food for hares. |
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Don’t use herbicides such as paraquat,
which are known to kill hares. |
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Don’t shoot
hares in late winter unless you are sure crops are being damaged. A
February hare shoot can remove 60% of the breeding stock. |
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Don’t let poaching jeopardise the hare population.
Contact the local police Wildlife Liaison Officer to get help on this. |
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Farmers can help to
conserve hares by improving cover and grazing conditions.
On arable farms cereal
crops provide abundant cover in summer, but in winter, provided the character of
the landscape remains open, game crops, hedgerows and small woodlands will
benefit hares. However, grazing conditions are often very poor on arable farms
in summer when the crops have lengthened. On these farms the little remaining
grass along field boundaries and tracks may be the only grazing available for
adults and leverets alike. Providing more grass in the form of wide strips or
patches of pasture is the best way to improve habitat on arable farms. It can be
achieved at minimum cost with the judicious use of set-aside.
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On livestock farms
cover is usually the limiting factor. Most areas of grass are either grazed or
cut for silage in summer. There may be few areas where leverets can hide and
they may be very exposed to foxes which patrol the fields at night. Keeping some
areas such as banks, ditch sides and other features fenced off from livestock
will allow the tall grass to develop.
High numbers of foxes on any farm will
limit hare numbers. Grass cutting also kills many leverets, so steps should be
taken, if possible, to cut in a way that reduces this risk to a minimum.
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