The Scotsman

Landowners are a country mile ahead in looking after wild and managed rural spaces

Dee Ward reports on a new scheme to drive best practice

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Never has so much been expected from our Scottish countrysid­e. As a nation, we collective­ly look towards our delightful rural landscape and expect it to produce food, employment, a space for recreation, clean air and also a space for wildlife to grow.

All of the land in Scotland is managed for a specific purpose and how we offset many of the competing demands can be ac hall enging balancing act, especially where the management should also make commercial sense. Yet, that does not mean we shouldn’t try our best to get the balance just right.

Wildlife Estates Scotland( WE S) is a national version of the Euro - p ean Landowners’ Organisati­on’s Wildlife Estates (WES) accreditat­ion scheme and is driving for ward best practice in land management throughout Scotland’s farms, estates

and other rural landholdin­gs. Since being developed by Scottish Land & Estates, with support from Scottish Natural Heritage, more than 1.26 million acres of land has qualified for WES certificat­ion. For a scheme which made its first accreditat­ion in 2013, this is an impressive achievemen­t and places Scotland second in the league table of European nations, with only Spain ahead on approximat­ely 1.6 million acres.

However, WES has plans to grow further–we want to double the number of accredited areas to 2.5 million acres by 2023 and have recently appointed a new project officer, Caroline Pringle, to help us pursue that goal.

But why does a voluntary accreditat­ion scheme such as WES actually matter? In truth, there are many different answers to that question. Farmers and landowners want to run their businesses profitably and efficientl­y but many also recognise that they have stewardshi­p of the wildlife and habitat around them.

This is a theme that is becoming ever more important as we look towards how land will be managed following our departure from the European Union.

The Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP) currently supports farming production across Europe and this is likely to be replaced by a new form of public support for land management as we move into the mid-2020s and beyond.

South of the border, Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove has hailed the future of a ‘Green Brexit’ where financial support for land-based businesses would be more closely tied to deliver y of public goods. By that, we mean landowners supporting strategies such as carbon capture, provision of clean water as well as flood mitigation, and, naturally, the enhancemen­t of biodiversi­ty.

Whilst there is currently less detail in Scotland on what will replace the CAP, the Scottish Government has ambitious climate change targets and with land managers already supporting the government on delivering these policies, it means WE S accredited properties are already well-placed to help the Scottish Government meet these targets.

There is no archetypal landholdin­g that goes through the accreditat­ion process. It covers farm sand estates with a wide variety of land uses, including sporting, forestry and conservati­on.

One of our most recently accredited properties is Glenbervie Estate in Kincardine­shire. It is a diverse 2,000 acre estate and sits at the hear t of the Macphie food business, the UK’S

l e a d i n g i n d e p e n d e n t i n g r e d i e n t s manufactur­er.

R o x b u r g h e E s t a t e r e c e i v e d i t s a c c r e d i t a t i o n s h o r t l y a f t e r G l e n - ber vie and it covers 52,000 acres in the south of S cotland where land management encompasse­s agricultur­e, forestry and sporting activities.

R e c e n t c o n s e r v a t i o n p r o j e c t s undertaken by Roxburghe include a five -year programme to enhance biodiversi­ty and habitat on moorland at Byrecleugh and Rawburn, benefiting birds such as curlew, lapwing and snipe and, in particular, black grouse. The estate has also been developing a project to restore grey par tridge numbers, with 43 pairs in 2012 building to 127 pairs by 2017.

Different forms of land use achieve distinct outcomes for biodiversi­t y and conservati­on and there can often be conflicts between those. Species that thrive on certain forms of land do considerab­ly less well on others, such as wading birds which flourish on moorland but are becoming a far rarer sight on other land types. This can often lead to tricky balancing acts for land managers but all of the WES accredited properties have a shared resolution to enhance biodiversi­ty, on a landscape scale, while maintainin­g their livelihood­s.

WE S h a s r e c e n t l y a s s e m b l e d a n e w a dv i s o r y b o a r d a n d t e c h n i - cal committee which has a broad sp ectrum of representa­tion from organisati­ons including the Scottish Government, SNH, the Cairngorms Na t i o n a l P a r k Au t h o r i t y, A n g u s Glens Moorland Group, the RSPB and the Game and Wildlife Conservati­on Trust as well as representa­tives from private landholdin­gs.

I t i s ho p e d t h a t t h is wi ll b ui l d a broad consensus on how best to manage all the different forms of land we have in S cotland and that the range of skills and knowledge ava i l a b l e t o WES w i l l e n s u r e that it is the standout accreditat­ion scheme for land managers who are serious about conserving and enhancing biodiversi­ty.

As we move for ward into the next decade and whatever the future holds for our rural are - as, it is incumbent on all of us to follow standards of excellence as custodians of our precious land. Dee Ward, vice-chairman of operations, Wildlife Estates Scotland.

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