Norman Day
New Member
I just saw a wallaby on Studham Lane coming out of Dagnall - is anyone looking for it? Escaped from Whipsnade I assume…
I just saw a wallaby on Studham Lane coming out of Dagnall - is anyone looking for it? Escaped from Whipsnade I assume…
I just saw a wallaby on Studham Lane coming out of Dagnall - is anyone looking for it? Escaped from Whipsnade I assume…
I suppose it could potentially be part of a feral population in the area, seems oddly convenient to be near a zoo where they free roam though.In the spirit of helpfulness and as the zoo was shut I gave Beds police a call (non emergency so no one’s time was taken up) - apparently they get reports of wallabies outside and around there quite a lot and they will go and take a drive around if someone was in the area but it’s a known ‘outside’ thing. Who knew.
I suppose it could potentially be part of a feral population in the area, seems oddly convenient to be near a zoo where they free roam though.
I still see them quite often at RAF Odiham in Hampshire. I'm not entirely sure why they'd choose to live under the flightpath of a load of Chinooks but apparently they don't seem to mind
The zoo will have already reported it to the local authority, as this is a zoo licence requirement to do so, for any animal which escapes outside the zoo grounds.In the spirit of helpfulness and as the zoo was shut I gave Beds police a call (non emergency so no one’s time was taken up) - apparently they get reports of wallabies outside and around there quite a lot and they will go and take a drive around if someone was in the area but it’s a known ‘outside’ thing. Who knew.
Are you saying there is a self-sustaining population in Bedfordshire? - as I have never heard of one. Animals released in the 1950s could hardly be living 80 years later! The sightings since are likely to be sporadic escapes, and almost all such are eventually killed by cars.There have been Tasmanian Red-necked wallabies wild in the Bedford area since the 1950s. The then Duke of Bedford released several during that period. (He also released several bird species, but few survived for long.) Many sightings have been made over the years.
Are you saying there is a self-sustaining population in Bedfordshire? - as I have never heard of one. Animals released in the 1950s could hardly be living 80 years later! The sightings since are likely to be sporadic escapes, and almost all such are eventually killed by cars.
They certainly do breed in the UK, in 2020 there were 95 verified sightings including joeys in pouch so definitely breeding. I used to spend time around Milton Keynes and many people there had spotted them, including a white one for some time.
Wild wallabies sightings are growing in the UK. Here’s exactly where | BBC Science Focus Magazine
If they were commonly breeding, then surely they would have ended up on the invasive species list? It only takes whiff, for the Government to try to ban something this way - just look at the Coati fiasco, for example...
Two notes, firstly they are considered invasive, there’s more info on the Wikipedia - Red-necked wallaby - Wikipedia
Secondly, coatis wasn’t the UK. It was an EU plan based on animals that had become invasive in different countries who were members, coatis became naturalised in Majorca and so were added to the list. We could change that if we wanted but there’s no movement to really.
Secondly, coatis wasn’t the UK. It was an EU plan based on animals that had become invasive in different countries who were members, coatis became naturalised in Majorca and so were added to the list. We could change that if we wanted but there’s no movement to really.
Not only was the addition of coatis partially due to an invasive and breeding population in the UK (which died out during the extremely harsh winter of 2009/2010 or thereabouts), but my "lifetick" for the species was actually one of the animals in question![]()
2 - Coatis most certainly were added partly due to the animals living in the UK as well.
Read the papers, it was very clear on why certain animals were included. It was animals that had become problematic in certain areas.
There’s many animals in the UK and elsewhere who were invasive and not on the list because the list was very specific in its aims.