To me it comes down to acceptable risk. Currently there is no-to-little acceptable risk to human interests from predators.
Humans don’t like the fact that wolves eat their sheep so they kill all the wolves, they don’t like that foxes eat their chickens so they kill every fox, they don’t like magpies eating eggs so the kill magpies. I saw a black bird eating dozens of worms yesterday, should we kill blackbirds to protect the worms?
Surely there is a balance where we can change our view on controlling nature and learn to live with wolves taking the odd sheep or foxes killing the odd chicken.
We can use our adaptability and incredibly powerful brains to figure out solutions to protect our livestock against a changing environment.
I’m not a farmer, I don’t have sheep but I’m allowed a voice to say that maybe just because we have always done it this way that we always should.
If it wasn’t for our ability to embrace change, we would still be swinging in the savannah in East Africa.

Humans don’t like the fact that wolves eat their sheep so they kill all the wolves, they don’t like that foxes eat their chickens so they kill every fox, they don’t like magpies eating eggs so the kill magpies. I saw a black bird eating dozens of worms yesterday, should we kill blackbirds to protect the worms?
Surely there is a balance where we can change our view on controlling nature and learn to live with wolves taking the odd sheep or foxes killing the odd chicken.
We can use our adaptability and incredibly powerful brains to figure out solutions to protect our livestock against a changing environment.
I’m not a farmer, I don’t have sheep but I’m allowed a voice to say that maybe just because we have always done it this way that we always should.
If it wasn’t for our ability to embrace change, we would still be swinging in the savannah in East Africa.