The government has abandoned its planned expansion of badger culling to reduce TB in cattle.
The environment department's original plan was to announce up to 10 new cull areas in South West England each year.
Defra's own independent assessment shows that culls in two pilot areas were not effective, and raised questions about their humaneness.
These pilot culls will continue, though there will be no independent oversight to assess their future performance.
"Start Quote
End Quote Owen Paterson Environment SecretaryThe need for the field trials and required legislative changes mean that a useable cattle vaccine is still many years away"
In a Commons statement, the Environment Secretary Owen Paterson proposed a programme of vaccination around the edges of the most badly affected parts of the country.
This, he said, would create a buffer zone of immunity that would stop the disease from spreading.
"We have always been clear that there would be lessons to be learnt from the first year of these four-year culls," Mr Paterson said.
"If we do not control TB, the bill will rise to £1bn over the next decade. It is vital that farmers, vets, non-government organisations and politicians work together to free England of TB."
'Open season'The Shadow Environment Secretary Maria Eagle called the pilot culls "disastrous" and said Mr Paterson had put "prejudice before science".
She also said the environment secretary had ignored calls in the House of Commons to seek alternatives to culling.
"Start Quote
End Quote Prof Rose Woodroffe Institute of ZoologyI'm disappointed that this year's culls will lack the independent oversight needed to provide confidence"
"What he's announced now is simply open season on the badgers in the culling areas," she said.
Prof Rosie Woodroffe, from the Institute of Zoology, told BBC News: "I think it's excellent news that Defra ministers have decided not to extend badger culling to new areas, when the poor performance of last year's pilot culls raises very serious questions about whether this approach will make a bad situation worse.
"Continued culling in the Somerset and Gloucestershire area needs to be much more humane, and much more effective, than last year's pilots, and so I'm disappointed that this year's culls will lack the independent oversight needed to provide confidence in those key measures."
Responding to accusations he had ignored scientific advice, Mr Paterson said England's chief vet, Nigel Gibbens, had warned against stopping the cull now in the Somerset and Gloucestershire pilot areas.
He added that some £24.6m would be invested over the course of this parliament in the development of effective TB vaccines for both cattle and badgers.
"In 2013, I agreed with the European Commissioner the work needed to develop a viable cattle vaccine. We are designing the large scale field trials necessary to take this forward," said Mr Paterson.
"The need for the field trials and required legislative changes mean that a useable cattle vaccine is still many years away."
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