Says Hugh Warwick in his introduction:
"I feel very strongly about animals - and about nature. I find it hits me hard in the heart when I see and hear of cruelty, and I can find myself despairing at the state of humanity." Highly relatable for me personally, and I'm sure many others who consider picking up this book.
Throughout the book there are reminders that we can't turn back time - we have introduced invasive wildlife (I resonate with the acknowledgement in Chapter 2 that this should be framed as an anthropogenic problem - the animal shouldn't be demonised). We can't undo these introductions - now we have a responsibility to mitigate or adapt - and learn and deeply consider which will do the least harm - mitigation or adaptation. The implications of our actions need to be considered, and these considerations should impact the decisions made.
"Minimising suffering is a good starting point," writes Warwick. Minimising suffering doesn't mean zero culling. It does however mean, that if culling needs to take place, it needs to be done well, not haphazardly, without consideration, or by halves.
While reading this book I was reminded of something I heard on a podcast ('Knowing Animals') years ago. Animal ethicist and professor Robert C Jones spoke about the moral obligation of veganism, and I think it applies well when considering harm minimisation and culling wildlife:
"...put simply, I think it's a principle that most people agree with, which is: if you can prevent or not cause unnecessary harm, suffering or death, without much cost to yourself, that's something that you're obligated to do."
Taking this perspective, in terms of culling for conservation, sometimes there IS a genuine cost to ourselves and/or the health of vital ecological systems, and that might require some level of "necessary harm." The act of not killing, writes Warwick in Chapter 10 "can cause more death and, probably, more suffering than if killing had taken place." But when it can be prevented - if there are better, less harmful options - those are the ones we should feel an imperative to take.