Wildflower meadows
Discover the wild side of meadows and how you can make your own
Wildflower meadows, though vibrant and beautiful, play a vital role in maintaining pollinator populations, increasing biodiversity and providing habitats.
Whether it’s the delicate foxglove or the humble cow parsley, wildflowers help support the 1,500 species of pollinator in the UK, offering food and shelter for insect pollinators such as bees and butterflies. And the more diverse a meadow’s wildflower species is, the larger the diversity of pollinators that visit them, also helping to maintain insectivore populations.
Ecologically productive as they may be, these types of meadows typically grow in unproductive soil. Soils that are shallow, poor at holding water or acidic are categorised as unproductive. Grass species in particular can dominate a meadow with productive soils, out competing wildflowers such as bluebells. Yet despite this, wildflowers have adapted to thrive in these harsher conditions to keep the competition at bay.
However, these flower-rich fields have been declining dramatically. Around 97 per cent of UK wildflower meadows have been lost since the 1930s, occupying only one per cent of the UK’S land area. This is a result of agricultural progress and land development. The introductions of livestock farming and herbicides have contributed to the removal of wildflower meadows, while the use of fertilisers has allowed surrounding soil to become more productive, meaning dominant grass species can threaten wildflowers. The development of roads and residential homes has also played a part in this concerning decline.
Ecological charities and organisations such as Plantlife and Kew Gardens campaign to reclaim wildflower meadows in the UK. From protecting wildflower roadside verges to making our gardens more ‘wild’, these efforts aim to support the declining pollinator populations.
“97 per cent of Uk wildflower meadows have been lost since the 1930s”