Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981

(Redirected from General licences under the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981)

The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 is an law for environmental conservation made by the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It protects native species and restricts the release of non-native species into the wild. The Act is split into four parts. Killing most mammals and almost all birds is illegal in the United Kingdom, except for certain types and for certain reasons.

Licenses

General licences under the act to hunt birds are issued each year by the Department for Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) in England. The Department can give a licence to kill or disturb birds. It also gives out a general licence. This allows any "authorised person", that is someone who has the landowner's permission, to kill certain birds, or to destroy their eggs or nests, if there is no other way to get rid of the birds.

This table shows the name of the bird, and the reasons (Marked with a tick) that type of bird can be destroyed.

Common name Scientific name To prevent the spread of disease1 To help conserve wild birds To preserve public health or public safety
Canada Goose Branta Canadensis Yes check.svg X mark.svg Yes check.svg
Crow Corvus corone Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Dove, Collared Streptopelia decaocto Yes check.svg X mark.svg Yes check.svg
Gull, Great Black-backed Larus marinus Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Gull, Herring Larus argentatus Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Gull, Lesser Black-backed Larus fuscus Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Jackdaw Corvus monedula Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Jay Garrulus glandarius Yes check.svg Yes check.svg X mark.svg
Magpie Pica pica Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Pigeon, Feral Columba livia Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Rook Corvus frugilegus Yes check.svg Yes check.svg Yes check.svg
Woodpigeon Columba palumbus Yes check.svg X mark.svg Yes check.svg

1or to prevent serious damage to livestock or damage to foodstuffs for livestock, crops, vegetables, fruit, growing timber, fisheries or inland waters.

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