In short, anything that looks roughly two-thirds wildcat will be classified as a wildcat, so in the time it takes to say "re-contextualised" the population has ballooned from 35 individuals to thousands; quite a few pet cat owners worldwide will be waking up to find they have a government-approved Scottish wildcat purring at the end of the bed.
So is the Government and its main species conservation body signalling, by stealth, the extinction of the unalloyed, pure Scottish wildcat?
Piper said if the Government diverted just a few hundred thousand pounds to efforts being made in the Ardnamurchan Peninsula, where the Scottish Wildcat Association has been working to breed the last cats in isolation, the final few dozen might yet have a future. "It seems, though, that they are simply not prepared to take the risk of spending that money without the guarantee of success."
A spokesman for Scottish Natural Heritage said: "Steve Piper's opinion is not one that we share. And we've no idea where he gets his figures from."
The Scottish wildcat thrives on its own, hunting rabbits, birds and rodents. The hybridised wildcat, though, will exhibit few such solitary tendencies.
- Observer