Volunteer botanists are getting behind a major new
project to help protect Nidderdale AONBs important wildlife sites.
Working with local landowners, volunteers are surveying 87 Sites of
Importance for Nature Conservation (SINCs) across the AONB
including ancient woodlands, species rich grasslands and
heathland.
Some of the most important sites are protected by
international or national designations such as Special Protection
Areas (SPAs) and Sites of Special Scientific Interest
(SSSIs). However, SINCs are also valuable
habitats that provide a refuge for rare or threatened plants or
animals.
They often owe their existence to natural processes and the
way the land has been farmed in the past. Unlike
the SSSIs and SPAs they are non-statutory designations, which means
landowners are under no obligation to manage them in a certain
way.
To help safeguard these sites for the future Nidderdale AONB
have developed a project to contact all landowners and provide them
with information about their SINC, survey the site and provide
advice on how the site can be best managed.
Marian Wilby, AONB Farming and Conservation Officer said "this
project is really important because a lot of landowners don't even
know they have a SINC on their land. When we go
out and survey the site it is also a chance for us to talk to them
about how they can access grants and volunteer help to manage the
site".
Fifteen local volunteers have been busy in late spring and
into the summer surveying sites. Many are
experienced botanists and naturalists in their own right so the
results from their work has thrown up some really useful
information. Marian said, "The data from the
surveys highlights what fantastic wildlife sites there are in the
AONB. Some are really small and hidden away but
very valuable none the less. It is essential
that we work closely with landowners to help them protect the
plants and wildlife for the future".
Three SINCs have been selected as 'demonstration sites' and
events for landowners will be run on these to highlight how simple
changes to the way the land is managed can create great benefits
for wildlife.
Using funds secured from the Yorkshire Dales Millennium Trust
the AONB Conservation Volunteers will carry out a range of
practical work on sites, including Yorkshire Water's Timble Ings,
to improve the site for flora and fauna. This
will include creating new habitats for dragonflies and nightjar and
woodlark.
For more information about the project visit the
'SINC pages' of
this website.