HERNE BAY: As the sun rose on Monday over southeast England, three bison emerged from a corral into a new woodland home as part of an ambitious project to transform the natural environment.
The trio immediately began munching birch tree leaves in the ancient woods near Canterbury, to restore and manage the area with their behaviour — and minimal human interference.
It marks the first time in millennia that European bison — the continent’s largest land mammal and the closest living relative to ancient steppe bison that once roamed Britain — will live in wild conditions once again.
“(It’s a) really momentous occasion today,” Mark Habben, of the Wildwood Trust which is leading the five-year conservation project, said.
“It couldn’t have gone any better… they took a glance back, looked at us and then disappeared into the woodlands,” he added, moments after the release.
The female bison — one matriarch and two younger cows — will now graze, eat bark, fell trees and take so-called dust baths, churning up the ground in the woods.
This creates a multitude of benefits, helping other species forge habitats as the bison become the perfect “ecosystem engineers”.
“We’re doing this to restore the environment and restore a native English woodland and everything that thrives in and around that kind of habitat,” explained Habben, saying it was “critically important”.
“We don’t want to be using machinery… using native resources, ecosystem engineers as we like to call them — in the form in this case of the European bison — is exactly the right thing to do.”
The female bison, which arrived after living on smaller enclosures in Ireland and the Scottish Highlands, will be joined by a bull at the site, owned by the Kent Wildlife Trust charity, in the coming months
