National Trust outlines ambition to help restore UK’s natural heritage

llamedos

New Member
The National Trust today outlined ambitious plans to help reverse the decline in wildlife on all land in its ownership – including an aim to create 25,000 hectares of new habitats by 2025.

As one of the country’s largest landowners, the Trust wants to play its part in addressing the dramatic slump in UK species and improve soil quality and water quality in the countryside. An in-depth study last year found 56 per cent of species were in decline.

The conservation charity, which was set up to protect places of natural beauty, hopes to create and restore “Priority Habitats”, areas identified by the government as threatened and in need of conservation support, on 10 per cent of its land.

highland-cattle-conservation-grazing-above-the-village-of-malham-yorkshire-dales-national-park-c2a9national-trust-imagespaul-harris.jpg

Highland cattle conservation grazing above the village of Malham, Yorkshire Dales National Park. Credit: National Trust Images/Paul Harris




Farming will remain vital to the Trust’s approach to countryside management and the charity will work in partnership with tenant farmers to see how they can help deliver nature-rich, productive, fertile landscapes which are good for wildlife and good for farming. Supporting sustainable farming will be crucial for the plans to succeed.

Many of the Trust’s 1,500 farm tenants are already farming in a way which benefits wildlife. The charity said that it wanted to discuss, listen and learn from them and other groups as it explores how nature-friendly measures could be introduced or enhanced across all of its farmed land.

The aim is that at least 50 per cent of farmland will be ‘nature-friendly’ by 2025, with protected hedgerows, field margins, ponds, woodland and other habitats allowing plants and animals to thrive.

The Government, tenant farmers and conservation charities have all welcomed the Trust’s approach.

Peter Nixon, Director of Land, Landscape and Nature at the National Trust, said: “Our charity was founded to protect our natural as well as cultural heritage and we believe we should be playing an active role in reviving nature – by doing what we can on our own land.

“Nature has been squeezed out to the margins for far too long. We want to help bring it back to the heart of our countryside. Despite the battering it’s taken over many decades, nature has an incredible ability to rejuvenate and revive if given the conditions to thrive.

“Birds such as the lapwing, cuckoo, and curlew are part of the fabric of our rural heritage. But they’ve disappeared from many parts of the countryside. We want to see them return to the fields, woods and meadows again, along with other wildlife which was once common and is now rare.”

The Trust will look to implement the “better, bigger, more and joined up” approach to nature called for in a Government commissioned review by Sir John Lawton.

Planting more hedgerows, which act as ‘wildlife corridors’ for birds and bats, establishing more lowland meadows and creating wetlands where appropriate could all help establish new habitats and will be considered in partnership with tenant farmers and other stakeholders.

The Trust’s approach could also involve:

  • Better: Adapting drainage systems, removing invasive non-native species, re-naturalising rivers and adapting farming practices to help improve the condition of habitats.
  • Bigger and More: Enlarging existing small areas of habitat, to make them more resilient. Sometimes this will mean more of the same, allowing a habitat to spread out. At other times it will be best to create a complementary habitat.
  • Joined up: Seeking ways to improve landscapes so that wildlife can move through them and make use of all the area rather than just the patches of habitat.
The Trust has outlined plans to help support farmers post-Brexit, when £2.6billion of EU subsidies for the industry will end, and the charity said tenant farmers would continue to be essential partners in helping to restore the health of the natural environment.

Peter Nixon said: “The future of farming and the environment are inextricably linked – they are reliant on the other to succeed. So, it’s not a case of supporting one at the expense of the other. We want both to thrive.

“We need the support of our farmers and want to help them in their businesses and combine our skills and expertise to deliver a healthier, more beautiful environment. That’s why we will work with them and explore how we make improvements together.”

The Trust’s new commitments could play an important role in helping deliver the Government’s own ambitions to improve the natural environment.

Plans to make space for nature are expected to help meet 12.5 per cent of Defra’s overall national target to create 200,000 hectares of new Priority Habitats by 2020.

Environment Secretary Andrea Leadsom said: “The National Trust has always been synonymous with our beautiful countryside, and I welcome plans to create thousands of hectares of new habitat for some of our most important species.

“It is my ambition that we become the first generation to leave the natural environment in a better state than we found it, and we can only do this by working closely with farmers and land owners – growing hedgerows, restoring earth banks and creating wetlands.

“I’m really pleased nature will be prioritised across the Trust’s farmland, supporting even more of our plants and wildlife and helping deliver our target to create 200,000 hectares of priority habitat by 2020.”

George Dunn, Chief Executive of the Tenant Farmers Association, said: “I commend the National Trust for its determination to work positively with its tenant farmers to achieve greater nature conservation objectives from its land. Accepting that it has much to learn from working in partnership with its tenants who are already farming to high environmental standards, the National Trust must now put in place the practical arrangements to deliver this. Farm tenants will be heartened by the National Trust’s clearly expressed position that good environmental management in the countryside cannot be divorced from the achievement of productive and sustainable farming.”

Marian Spain, CEO of Plantlife, said: “Half of our Important Plant Areas – botanical hotspots of international importance – includes land belonging to the National Trust. This ambitious new commitment from the Trust is exactly the approach these areas need. As part of our expert partnership, Plantlife is already working with the Trust on how to manage their land for threatened plants like cornfield flowers and oakwood lichens, how to create wildflower meadows, and even purchasing a flock of over 400 sheep for the National Trust shepherd on the Great Orme. It is a bold commitment by one of our largest landowners and we are excited about extending the breadth and scale of our partnership.”

Martin Harper, RSPB’s Conservation Director, said: “I am delighted by the National Trust’s new intent. We all have a part to play in creating create a countryside richer in wildlife and I am pleased that they will be supporting farmers to reverse declines in nature alongside a thriving farming sector.

“We look forward to continuing to work in partnership with the Trust to help them realise this ambition.”
 

ajcc

Member
Livestock Farmer
Hmmmm, a lot of woolly words. I for one have a NT farm on an agricultural tenancy....the NT may find they don't have as much control of tenanted farms as they would like to pretend. To suddenly unilaterally decide that environmentalism is more important than Agriculture may not wash with grassroots farmers who have no desire to become park keepers as primary career.
 

exmoor dave

Member
Location
exmoor, uk
First thing they need to do is stop taking land back in hand to manage in-house,

It doesn't work and it is poor value for money.


Like wise it would be nice if they would recognise that they have miss managed alot of ground and start listening to people who know what they are doing, instead of trying to solve miss management by just miss managing it in a different way :facepalm: and moving further and further away from the original aim.
 

Sid

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
South Molton
I know a NT tenant that is being forced out f his farm as they want to make it completely open access for the nearby new town making his farming untenable.

The biggest recipients of the BPS is the NT and RSPB lets see them do all this from just donations.
 

Cranman

Member
They love badgers. :whistle:
Or rather they love the donations people who misunderstand the role of badgers both in spread of disease and overall ecology, bring in.

“Birds such as the lapwing, cuckoo, and curlew are part of the fabric of our rural heritage. But they’ve disappeared from many parts of the countryside. We want to see them return to the fields, woods and meadows again, along with other wildlife which was once common and is now rare.”

http://archive.defra.gov.uk/foodfarm/farmanimal/diseases/atoz/tb/documents/badger-control-consequences.pdf

‘Research carried out within the RBCT (Defra 2007) showed that meadow pipit and skylark populations remained constant in culled areas but declined in non‐cull experimental control areas. Also, artificial nests deployed to investigate rates of badger predation tended to have higher survival rates in areas where badgers were culled compared to no‐cull control areas’.

Meadow Pipits are the principle host of cuckoos over much of rural Britain. If cuckoos are to recover, so must meadow pipits.

This research, conducted by the RSPB emphasises the crucial role of predator control in the conservation of ground nesting birds, particularly lapwing and curlew:

Upland land use predicts population decline in a globally near-threatened wader (2013)

‘3. Curlew population changes over an 8- to 10-year period were positively related to gamekeeper density (a surrogate of predator control intensity) and inversely to the area of woodland surrounding sites, as a likely source of predators to adjacent open ground. Model predictions suggest that increasing woodland cover from 0% to 10% of the land area within 1 km of populated sites requires an increase in human predator control effort of about 48%, to a level associated with high-intensity grouse production, to achieve curlew population stability.

4. Curlew nesting success, known to be a key driver of population trends, was also positively related to gamekeeper density and inversely to woodland area surrounding sites, providing a plausible mechanistic link between land use and population change’.

While the research is expressly concerned with upland Britain where badgers are rare, it is interesting to note that ‘increasing woodland cover from 0% to 10% of the land area within 1 km of populated sites requires an increase in human predator control effort of about 48%, to a level associated with high-intensity grouse production, to achieve curlew population stability’. In lowland Britain this is the default landscape, and in addition to foxes and crows, it is overrun with badgers. The RSPBs research would suggest that 'wildlife corridors' are likely to benefit predators rather than prey.
 
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llamedos

New Member
The decrease in Curlew numbers around here correlates with Open access and increase in loose dogs, areas where neither are allowed still hold reasonable Curlew numbers.

Our local moor used to hold a vast population of them and always has done, now it holds vast piles of dog :poop:

If NT think they are going to increase bird life by importing donaters, they are mistaken.
 

chipchap

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
South Shropshire
This country needs to address the balance of payments in food.
We are importing more and more food, and letting our countryside be controlled by idiots whose actions are in fact damaging our natural wildlife.
We used to have a diverse population of birds here in Shropshire, now all we have are red kites, buzzards, pheasants and partridge.
Very sad, and by the time they realise, there will be no going back.
 

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