Lynx are currently extinct in Great Britain, although the date of their extinction is not known with certainty. The youngest physical remains of Lynx, from Kinsey Cave in Craven, have been carbon-dated to between 150 CE and 600 CE. A literary reference to what are probably lynx in Cumbria, dating to between the seventh and the tenth centuries, occurs in the Welsh poem
Dinogad's Smock, suggesting they may not have been extirpated from the island of
Great Britain until the Middle Ages. Since the extinction of the
grey wolf from Britain in 1680 (see
wolves in Great Britain), the island contains no terrestrial
apex predators. In the post-apex predator period,
red and
roe deer populations have increased dramatically due to having no natural predators; with excessive deer foraging leading to prevention of forest regeneration, the stripping of tree vegetation, and removing of the shrub layer in forests, which provides a habitat for birds such as
nightingales and
willow warblers. Reintroducing large predators such as the lynx are seen by
rewilding experts as a means of restoring balance in the
ecosystem and keeping deer numbers under control. ==Proposals==