4 minute read
Wild thoughts
WICKHAM MARKET ALLOMENTS: STEVE AYLWARD Allotments provide sanctuary for people and wildlife.
These were some of the few remaining heaths that had escaped the plough only to disappear under hundreds of new homes. Heathlands no longer had agricultural value and their wildlife, cultural and landscape value was little understood, so these areas were labelled as perfect for development. There was a token attempt to relocate a part of Warren Heath where turves of heather were dug up and transported to a new location, but this was a pointless exercise as lowland heath is an entire ecosystem and you cannot simply relocate an ‘ecosystem’.
Habitats reimagined
Lowestoft must be one of the most habitat-diverse towns in England. Along the coastal fringe are sand dunes, vegetated shingle and soft cliffs capped by heathland, while on the western side are fens, reedbeds and broads. North Lowestoft has pockets of ancient woodland and orchid-rich grasslands while south of Lake Lothing are small wetlands and remnant areas of heath: a remarkable assemblage of habitats. There have been losses over the past 60 years though, and the development of a large supermarket on extensive greenwinged orchid meadows was amongst the worst.
The future for our urban wildlife looks much more promising today with many great initiatives. The Ipswich Parks team Stag beetles will quickly take advantage of deadwood piles in gardens.
have been amongst those leading the way with changes in management to benefit wildlife through the creation of meadow areas and wetlands, while Ipswich Golf Club has brilliantly integrated the natural heathland habitat into the courses at Purdis and Bixley. In Lowestoft and elsewhere, East Suffolk Council has stopped mowing grassland on wide road verges during the summer to create wonderful flower-lined routes through the town. This will benefit pollinating insects and could bring more kestrels into built-up areas again, demonstrating that even relatively small changes in the way we manage land can make a huge difference for wildlife.
Wild gardens
Town gardens are a potentially huge wildlife resource. With more and more people bringing wildlife into their gardens there is an exponential benefit as the number of wildlife-friendly gardens grows. Neighbouring garden-wildlife ponds effectively become a single entity sharing frogs, toads, dragonflies and other creatures. This enables populations of species to build and creates resilience by reducing dependency on a single pond or wildflower patch. Flying insects such as stag beetles, white-tailed bumblebees and speckled wood butterflies will quickly take advantage of deadwood piles, nectar-rich wildflowers and patches of unmown grass.
There are several big new developments in the pipeline around Ipswich, Lowestoft and Bury St Edmunds with the Ipswich ‘Garden Suburb’ amongst the biggest. This is an opportunity for bold and ambitious town planning to drive the
Bold planning could create large wildliferich spaces on the doorstep of new homes
STAG BEETLE: ALAMY; PARK: TERRY WHITTAKER
HELPING TOWN WILDLIFE
HEDGEHOG HIGHWAYS
A 13x13cm hole at the base of the fence is all you need.
Nature is adapting to our towns in unexpected ways, with rural species filling new ecological niches.
Messier verges with more voles will bring kestrels back to built-up areas.
Steve Aylward is Head of Property & Projects for Suffolk Wildlife Trust, working on many urban wildlife sites.
MESSY MEADOWS
Leave areas of your lawn unmown in the summer.
creation of large wildlife-rich green spaces on the doorstep of new homes, in turn enhancing the mental and physical health of generations of future residents. There is only one opportunity to get it right and it must be taken now.
The next 10 years are a wonderful chance to bring our towns to life by building on the progress of recent years. Less mowing, less pesticides, more thoughtful and sensitive management of open spaces and more urban tree planting could radically transform our towns. As electric cars become the norm, air quality will significantly improve benefitting both ourselves and the wildlife we share our towns with. Lots of people dream of escaping to the country, but why when our towns could be every bit as wildlife rich as the countryside?
Find out more
suffolkwildlifetrust.org/urbanvision
LET IT ROT
Piles of deadwood in your garden create microhabitats.
PERFECT PONDS
Installing a pond of any size can help wildlife.
TEAM UP WITH NEIGHBOURS
Find out about community wildlife gardening on p14.