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Queen's University Belfast


Hares more numerous in Irish Coursing Club preserves than wider countryside
Muzzled hare coursing in Ireland

 
Irish hares are eighteen times more abundant in areas managed by the Irish Coursing Club (ICC) than at similar sites in the wider countryside a recent study by Quercus has shown. 

There are approximately 76 local coursing clubs distributed throughout Ireland and each is associated with a number of discrete localities, known colloquially as ‘hare preserves’, which are managed favourably for hares including predator control, prohibition of other forms of hunting such as shooting and poaching and the maintenance and enhancement of suitable hare habitat. 

Anti-field sports organisations, in addition to animal welfare objections, dispute the efficacy of ICC hare population management practices claiming that annual harvesting of hares causes local population declines and expiration.

The research team, lead by Dr. Neil Reid, Quercus Centre Manager, indirectly tested the efficacy of management practices by comparing hare numbers within preserves to that in the wider countryside. 

“Whilst we cannot rule out the role of habitat, our results suggest that hare numbers are maintained at high levels in ICC preserves either because clubs select areas of high hare density and subsequently have a negligible effect on numbers or that active population management positively increases hare abundance” said Dr. Reid.

The research, published in the peer-reviewed international journal Acta Theriologica, suggested that field sports such as shooting, hunting and hare coursing promote the multifunctional use of farmland in which wildlife provides a resource for non-agricultural activities supporting sustainable development. Moreover, field sports may offer financial and recreational incentives to farmers and private landowners who are frequently willing to accept conservation costs over a wider area than Government can afford to subsidize. 

Co-author Prof. Ian Montgomery said “The Irish hare is one of the highest priority species in Ireland and its conservation is a fine balance between the management of suitable habitat within agricultural systems, population management by coursing clubs and associated animal welfare concerns. Without legal, well organised and regulated coursing much of the costs of conservation will fall exclusively on Government.”

This latest research follows on from a previous study published in the journal Animal Welfare during 2007, which showed that survival of hares at coursing events significantly improved with the introduction of compulsory muzzling of greyhounds in 1993 whilst improved levels of captive animal husbandry reduced mortality yet further. It is estimated that about 4% of the 6,000 or so hares netted by the ICC each year are killed with the rest being released back into the wild.

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