Researchers go wild for animal project

Fiona MacDonald surfed on the river to "live" like an otter

Researchers have taken a new approach to protecting animals - by attempting to live like them.

The aim of the work undertaken as part of the Risks Beyond Human Eyes project, a joint venture between risk research company ASRA and the University of the West of England, was to identify the risks animals face around the River Tone.

The volunteers lived like five different species for a few hours at a time over a six-month period - red deer, otter, earthworm, kestrel and salmon - to see what they experience.

Artist Fiona MacDonald, who replicated life as an otter, said: "I used a body board and underwater camera. I surfed down the river... just to feel what it was like to be in the flow."

She said the experience was "dramatic".

MacDonald said that one of the "most bizarre" things about being an otter was thinking about crossing the road, something otters have to do when roads are built across their usual paths.

"How can you predict when a car is going to turn up when you are only 30cm from the ground?" MacDonald said.

"You haven't had that experience of hold your mum's hand, look right, left. Otters get killed on our roads."

River Tone Helen Lewy is pictured standing in a field looking up to the sky. She is an older woman with dark grey hair that is blowing in the wind. Helen is wearing a navy jumper and a navy, pink, yellow and cream patterned scarf, the bottom of which she is holding.River Tone
Helen Lewy tried to see the world from the perspective of a kestrel

Scientist Phil Tovey, who is overseeing the project, said he wanted to understand the systematic risk some species face.

"Something happens in one part of the system and it cascades through and contaminates everything," he said.

"We don't just tackle one particular road crossing site.

"We also look at how that integrates with hedgerows, voles and tackling how we can do that at a community level rather than depending on other agencies to do that."

'New perspective'

Helen Lewy, part of the Friends of Longrun Meadow in Taunton, decided to be a kestrel as part of the project.

She said: "I went out and sat at the side of a meadow and got my mind into being a kestrel in this landscape.

"You look around and see if there's anywhere to nest and most importantly - where can I catch my food?

"We wanted to view the landscape in a new way and see the animals within the whole system."

She said the experience gave her a "new perspective" on what animals experience.

"It all began to make sense," she said.

The results of the group's research will be published in scientific journals.

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