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An open letter to Justin McCracken, Chief Executive of the Health Protection Agency, in response to their press release "County walking? Think snakes..." (23/5/12):
Dear Mr McCracken,
I object most strongly to the Health Protection Agency’s press release about adders today. It beggars belief that a government agency can produce such an alarmist and sensationalist communication. Its tone is inflammatory, its premise is flawed, and it is shameful news-mongering of the worst kind. The risk of adder bite is small compared to countless other daily risks, such as bee stings, allergens, getting out of the bath, and making a cup of tea, to name but a few. There have only ever been 14 reported deaths from adder bites in Britain, and none since 1975 – nearly 40 years ago.
You have inadvertently unleashed a tidal wave of persecution against a species that is already one of Britain’s most threatened. Adders have suffered centuries of persecution and habitat loss. They are declining across many areas of Britain, and are recently extinct from several counties in England. A report that I recently co-authored for the Amphibian and Reptile Conservation Trust on behalf of Natural England showed that adders have declined markedly in recent historical times.
A press release such as yours arguably does nothing to protect public health, and is more likely to endanger it by provoking greater hysteria and illegal acts of adder-killing. Adders are protected from killing and injury, under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (as amended). Every sensationalist campaign brings a renewed wave of persecution, regardless of the illegality of killing adders. What’s more, the increased publicity you have generated will probably bring some people into closer contact with adders than they otherwise would have.
At no point in your press release do you point out that it is illegal to kill adders, and at no point do you attempt to put your case into context alongside other risks. How on earth did adders reach the top of the priority list of life’s dangers? It seems that you opted for a sensationalist subject because of its perceived newsworthiness. As a result, you have left yourself wide open to a barrage of criticism from wildlife-lovers and level-headed people; something that was surely not the intended consequence.
Yours sincerely,
Dr Chris Gleed-Owen, Director & Principal Ecologist, CGO Ecology Ltd
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