Ancient
woodland will be pieced back together as part of Europe-wide project that will
give endangered species their habitats back
Robin
McKie, Science Editor
Sun 7 Oct
2018 07.00 BST
Only a
few tattered scraps of woodland in the Cairngorms provide evidence that a vast
forest once covered the Scottish Highlands and much of the rest of the nation.
This vast arboreal canopy provided homes for wolves, lynx, elks and many other
species.
Land
clearances for farming, and felling trees for timber, destroyed most of that
habitat hundreds of years ago, leaving only a few disconnected fragments of
land to provide shelter for dwindling numbers of animals.
But
conservationists believe they may soon be able to restore a substantial chunk
of this lost landscape and bring Caledonia’s beleaguered forest back to some of
its ancient glory. A £23m Endangered
Landscapes Programme (ELP)has selected the remains of the
Caledonian Forest to be the focus of a key restoration project – along with
seven other major regeneration schemes – to restore Europe’s most threatened
environments.
“The aim of the Scottish project is to connect
up the fragments of Caledonian Forest with land that is no longer degraded – as
it is at present – so that threatened species can communicate and move around,”
said Jeremy Roberts, of the RSPB, one of the major groups involved in the Cairngorms Connect project.
“We are
also going to provide restored habitats for threatened species that include
rare sphagnum mosses, sundews, dragonflies and damson flies. It is going to be
the biggest habitat restoration project in Britain. We will be working on more
than 600 square kilometres of land.”
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