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LYNX

Bern OKs shooting of sheep-eating lynx

Authorities in the canton of Bern have authorized the shooting of a wild lynx that has been poaching sheep in the Kander Valley.

Bern OKs shooting of sheep-eating lynx
Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Wildlife officials from the canton made the decision in consultation with those in the cantons of Fribourg and Vaud, as well as the federal office of the environment, the ATS news agency reported on Monday.

The female lynx killed six sheep between June 22nd and July 4th.

Betrayed by its radio transmitter collar, the pointy-eared wild cat attacked three different herds in the municipality of Kandergrund, the Bern cantonal office of agriculture and nature said.

According to the guidelines governing the management of lynx, a specimen can be ordered destroyed if it kills 15 livestock animals over a one-year period within a perimeter of five kilometres.

In this case, while the conditions are not fulfilled, the destruction of this animal is inevitable, cantonal officials said.

The lynx has preyed specifically on sheep and it is not possible to rapidly put into place the measures needed to protect other sheep in the area in question, the canton said.

The animal can only be shot by a wildlife officer in the canton of Bern.

The lynx was found orphaned and emaciated in the autumn of 2012 before being taken to the Landshut foundation’s wildlife facility at Utzenstorf in the canton of Bern.

It was nursed back to health before being released in May in the Diemtigen region of Bern.

Lynx were hunted to extinction in Switzerland by 1915 before being reintroduced in 1971.

There are now more than 100 of the animals in the country, according to estimates.

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LYNX

Lynx takes a rest on Norwegian family’s front drive

Usually a shy animal, a lynx offered an unusual sight at a family home in Trøndelag County when it strolled up the driveway and observed passing traffic.

Lynx takes a rest on Norwegian family’s front drive
A Eurasian lynx. Photo: lightpoet/Depositphotos

The rare wildlife sighting was originally reported by broadcaster NRK, which writes that 19-year-old Eirin Fjelle Tangvik managed to film the animal outside her home on Friday last week.

A medium-sized wild cat, the Eurasian lynx is the only wild cat native to Norway.

Although more common in far northern pine forest areas in Eurasia, smaller fragmented populations can be found in more southern regions, such as central county Trøndelag.

The nocturnal predator is rarely observed in the open, however.

“It was half past four in the afternoon and I was about to leave for work. Then I saw a large animal sitting at the bottom of our driveway. At first, I couldn’t figure out what it was and wondered whether it was a cat,” Tangvik said to NRK.

“It sat quietly watching the cars passing by. After a while it looked a bit frightened, and it started to walk up the road by our house. On the way into the garden it rubbed against a house corner, then it disappeared into the forest,” she continued.

The experience was more exciting than scary for the young observer, although she was concerned about the lynx attacking the family cat, according to NRK’s report.

Sightings of lynxes in residential areas are more common than many may think, wildlife researcher Jenny Mattisson of the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research told NRK.

“Often, it can be a case of young animals who are on the move to find their own habitat. Their journeys can pass places like this,” Mattisson said.

READ ALSO: Norway lynx numbers 'lowest in twelve years'

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