report about conservation of the Scottish wildcat from 2016 The Scottish wildcat was given protected status under the
United Kingdom's
Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. In the wild, efforts to conserve wildcats include
neutering feral cats and euthanizing diseased feral cats to prevent hybridization and the spread of disease. By 2014, the project members had researched nine potential action areas, settling on six, which were considered as having the highest likelihood of conservation success, with work planned beginning in 2015:
Morvern,
Strathpeffer,
Strathbogie, Strathavon, Dulnain and the Angus Glens. An area of the remote and largely undisturbed
Ardnamurchan Peninsula was designated a Scottish wildcat sanctuary. In 2018, the official efforts fell under the auspices of Scottish Wildcat Action, a coalition including government and academic institutions, with an updated list of five priority areas: Strathbogie, the Angus Glens, Northern Strathspey, Morvern and Strathpeffer. As of 2019, the wildcat population in Scotland was considered no longer viable and at the verge of extinction. In 2023,
NatureScot approved a license for release of captive-bred wildcats into the Cairngorms region during the summer of that year. The first of 19 cats were released in early June 2023. In spring 2024, at least two of the cats released the previous year gave birth to kittens. By August 2025 35 cats had been released, with a reported total of seven births in 2024 and five in 2025. Plans are being made to expand the successful reintroduction project.
In captivity A captive breeding programme for the Scottish wildcat has been established in the frame of the Scottish Wildcat Conservation Action Plan, with wild-caught individuals that pass genetic and morphological tests to be considered wildcats with less than 5% hybridization. This captive breeding programme has drawn criticism from the
Captive Animals Protection Society, an organization opposed to the existence of zoos, which stated the opinion that the breeding programme has "little to do with conservation and everything to do with these zoos stocking their cages". Six kittens were born at the Highland Wildlife Park in 2015. From 2011 to 2016, there have been 15 surviving Scottish wildcat kittens born at the Highland Wildlife Park. As of December 2016, around 80 Scottish wildcats were in captivity. ==In culture==