Wildlife Legislation and Pest Control: Wildlife and Countryside Act, General Licences, Protected Species List

Quick Answer: The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (as amended) is the primary UK statute protecting wild birds and animals. It makes it illegal to intentionally kill, injure, or take any wild bird, or to disturb birds at or near an active nest. Pest control of common pest species (pigeons, grey squirrels, rabbits, foxes, certain corvids) is lawful under General Licences issued by Natural England, Natural Resources Wales, and NatureScot — but these licences carry conditions and apply only to specific species for specific purposes. Using rodenticides or traps in a way that kills or harms a protected species is a criminal offence regardless of whether it was intentional.

Summary

The interaction between pest control and wildlife law is poorly understood by many practitioners, yet the consequences of getting it wrong are serious: criminal prosecution, unlimited fines, and custodial sentences in the most severe cases. The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 offers broad protection to wild birds (Schedule 1 for the most sensitive species, general protection for all others) and to a range of mammals, reptiles, and amphibians. The Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 strengthened enforcement provisions and extended protections.

General Licences (GLs) are the mechanism by which pest control of otherwise protected bird species is made lawful. Until 2019, General Licences in England operated as blanket authorisations — any eligible person could use them for the stated purposes without registration. Following a successful legal challenge by Wild Justice, Natural England revoked its General Licences in April 2019 and has since reissued them in revised form. The current General Licences require users to satisfy themselves that they are eligible and to act in accordance with the conditions, including using non-lethal methods where they are practicable and effective.

For pest controllers, the relevance of wildlife legislation extends well beyond birds. Secondary poisoning from second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs) affects raptors, owls, and foxes — all protected or managed species. Bat roosts are legally protected under the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017, and pest work inside buildings with active bat roosts requires a licence from Natural England. Grey squirrels, mink, and certain other invasive non-native species have their own regulatory frameworks that affect how they can be controlled and whether captured live animals can be released.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Species Protection Status Lawful Control Method Key Restrictions
Feral pigeon General protection (WCA 1981); GL covers lethal control Trapping, shooting, egg treatment under GL Must satisfy GL purpose (e.g., public health); must not affect protected species
Carrion crow General protection (WCA 1981); GL covers lethal control Larsen traps, shooting under GL Decoy bird welfare requirements; GL conditions must be met
Woodpigeon General protection (WCA 1981); GL covers lethal control Shooting, trapping under GL Agricultural/property protection purpose required
Grey squirrel No protection; Schedule 9 invasive Trapping, shooting, poison (squirrel hoppers in forestry) Live-caught animals must NOT be released
Brown rat No protection Rodenticide, trapping, shooting CRRU Code if using SGARs; secondary poisoning risk
House mouse No protection Rodenticide, trapping Secondary poisoning risk from SGARs; label compliance
Rabbit No protection (Pests Act 1954 obliges control in some contexts) Trapping, shooting, ferreting, gassing (with phosphine) Spring traps must be approved type and set in runs
Mink (American) Schedule 9 invasive; no protection Trapping Live-caught mink must NOT be released
Bat (all 18 species) Fully protected; Conservation of Habitats and Species Regs 2017 No lethal control; licensed mitigation only Roost disturbance is an offence even when bats absent
Barn owl Schedule 1 WCA 1981 (specially protected) No control; habitat management only Disturbance at nest is offence; indirect harm from secondary poisoning is enforcement risk
Red squirrel Schedule 5 WCA 1981 No control Keep away from control operations near squirrel habitats
Hedgehog Schedule 5 WCA 1981 No lethal control Care with traps and mechanical proofing; report accidental death

Detailed Guidance

Understanding the General Licence System

General Licences authorise pest control operations without requiring individual applications, provided the user meets eligibility criteria and the control is carried out for a purpose specified in the licence. In England, Natural England's current General Licences (revised following Wild Justice legal challenge) are structured around purposes rather than simply listing species.

The key eligibility requirement is that the person using the GL must:

  1. Be acting for one of the stated purposes (e.g., preserving public health, preventing serious damage to property)
  2. Have a reasonable basis for believing non-lethal methods are impracticable or would not prevent the damage
  3. Comply with all conditions in the GL, including welfare requirements for live traps

The "non-lethal first" principle is important. If an EHO or wildlife officer questions the basis for lethal control, the operator must be able to explain why alternatives (netting, spikes, gel, deterrents) were not practicable. This is not a high bar — for an established pigeon roost causing structural damage to a listed building, lethal control is clearly justified — but it must be considered and documented.

Individual Species Licences: For Schedule 1 birds, bats, and other fully protected species, any work that might affect them requires an individual licence from Natural England (or NRW / NatureScot). These are not automatically granted and require ecological surveys to demonstrate impact and mitigation. Pest controllers whose work takes them into buildings with potential bat roosts (roof works, loft treatments) must know when to stop and refer to a licensed bat surveyor.

Bats and Building Works

Bat roosts are among the most commonly encountered wildlife law issues in pest control and building maintenance. All UK bat species are protected under the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2017 (which implements the EU Habitats Directive, retained in UK law). The protection is absolute: it is an offence to deliberately kill or injure a bat, to deliberately disturb a bat in a way that affects its ability to survive or breed, or to damage or destroy a bat roost — even when no bats are present.

Pest controllers working in roof voids, loft spaces, and wall cavities must be alert to bat evidence: droppings (dark, rice-grain-sized, crumbly), bat bodies, grease marks, or the bats themselves. If bat evidence is found:

  1. Stop work immediately. Do not proceed with any treatment or physical work that could affect the roost.
  2. Inform the client that a bat roost has been found and that work requires a bat survey and Natural England licence before it can proceed.
  3. Do not apply any pesticides in the area — many standard pest control products are lethal to bats.
  4. Contact the Bat Conservation Trust (0345 1300 228) for guidance on the next steps.

The Bat Conservation Trust publishes guidance on bat-compatible building works. Natural England's Bat Mitigation Class Licences streamline some routine roost work, but individual licence applications are required for major works affecting roosts.

Rodenticide Use and Secondary Poisoning

The secondary poisoning risk from SGAR rodenticides is a wildlife law issue, not just a CRRU Code issue. Under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, killing a protected bird or animal — even unintentionally — through the use of a pesticide can constitute an offence, particularly where the risk was foreseeable. Barn owls, kestrels, red kites, buzzards, and sparrowhawks are all documented SGAR secondary poisoning victims in the UK.

The CRRU Code of Best Practice sets out mitigations: secure bait stations that exclude non-target wildlife, maximum bait amounts, clear-up requirements for dead rodents, and restrictions on outdoor use of high-risk SGARs. The HSE's Wildlife Incident Investigation Scheme (WIIS) investigates reports of dead or sick wildlife and can trace poisoning back to a specific treatment. WIIS investigations have resulted in HSE enforcement notices and, in more serious cases, prosecution under COSHH and wildlife legislation.

Practical mitigations for pest controllers:

Spring Traps, Cage Traps, and Trap Welfare

The Spring Traps Approval Order (various editions, most recently amended) specifies which spring traps may be used and the conditions for their use. Key points:

Invasive Non-Native Species

Several species that pest controllers encounter are listed under Schedule 9 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 as invasive non-native species (INNS). It is an offence under Section 14 to release or allow to escape into the wild any Schedule 9 species. This creates specific obligations:

The GB Non-Native Species Secretariat (GBNNSS) maintains the current list of Section 14 / Schedule 9 species and provides guidance on legal obligations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use General Licences for all pigeon control?

No. General Licences cover specific species (including feral pigeon in England) for specific purposes. You must satisfy the eligibility criteria — there must be a genuine need related to public health, property protection, or a similar listed purpose. Using a GL simply because pigeon presence is inconvenient, without a specific harm being prevented, is not lawful. Additionally, General Licences do not cover all bird species — they do not cover wood pigeon nesting, certain gull species without specific conditions, and do not cover any Schedule 1 species whatsoever.

What should I do if I find a dead owl or raptor near a treatment site?

Report it to the WIIS via HSE or Natural England. Do not dispose of the carcass. Place it in a sealed plastic bag with your contact details and notes on when and where it was found. WIIS can test for rodenticide residues and other causes. Proactive reporting, and demonstrating that your treatment was in full compliance with CRRU Code and UK BPR, is your best protection. Attempting to conceal a dead protected animal is a serious aggravating factor in any subsequent investigation.

Are foxes protected?

Foxes are not protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 in the way birds and Schedule 5 mammals are. However, the Hunting Act 2004 restricts fox hunting with dogs, and the Wild Mammals (Protection) Act 1996 prohibits causing unnecessary suffering to any wild mammal. Foxes may be shot, trapped, or excluded using humane methods. The most practical advice for pest contractors is to focus on exclusion and habitat management — lethal fox control is rarely within mainstream pest management scope and carries reputational risk.

My client has bats in the loft and wants them removed. What do I tell them?

Bats cannot be "removed" — this would constitute disturbing or destroying a roost, which is a criminal offence. The lawful approach is: (1) commission a bat survey by a licensed bat ecologist to identify species and roost type; (2) apply to Natural England for a European Protected Species (EPS) licence if works are needed that cannot avoid the roost; (3) ensure any works are carried out under the licence with the mitigation measures specified. A bat survey typically costs £150–£400 depending on building size and time of year. Pest controllers should not attempt bat surveys or handling without an individual bat licence.

Do the same rules apply in Scotland and Wales?

The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 applies across Great Britain but has been amended differently in Scotland and Wales. In Scotland, the Wildlife and Natural Environment (Scotland) Act 2011 made significant amendments. In Wales, the Environment (Wales) Act 2016 contains additional provisions. General Licences are issued separately by NatureScot (Scotland) and Natural Resources Wales — check the relevant issuing body for current licence conditions and species lists.

Regulations & Standards