The Scotsman

Spruce forests are far from ‘lifeless’

For most wildlife it’s the presence of a forest that’s important, not the species of tree, writes Dr Eleanor Harris

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Lockdown has had a curious intimacy. Video conferenci­ng gives us glimpses of friends’ houses and colleagues’ spouses. We swap curiositie­s cleared from cupboards on Whatsapp. Old photos of a bright red jumper featuring the WWF panda my grandpa knitted me in primary school caused great hilarity. Saving the world’s wildlife was my calling then; our holiday glen, with mossy rocks and squirrelni­bbled spruce-cones, was my own rainforest.

Fast-forward the growth of a conifer tree, and I’m working for Confor, the Confederat­ion of Forest Industries. I understand timber markets, carbon flows and sustainabi­lity auditing, which barely existed when I wore that jumper. Climate and nature emergencie­s are national concerns, but positions have polarised. I’ m often told those spruce forests, from which I now draw my livelihood, are “lifeless”, and forests should not be “exploited” for timber.

This polarisati­on doesn’t fit with my experience of those working forests’ singing green labyrinths. Nor does it fit with my knowledge of what’s required to hand on this planet to the next generation; replacing vast quantities of plastic, concrete, steel and oil with low-carbon, renewable wood. We need a great reforestat­ion, but it mustn’t be lifeless, and sure - ly it already isn’t? Was this just my hunch, or was there science to prove it? Researchin­g Confor’s report Biodiversi­ty, Forestry and Wood gave me the chance to find out.

There is science. Ecologists have spent thousands of hours listening for bird song and bats; counting plants in square sand butterflie­s along lines; fishing beetles and spiders from pitfall traps, or shaking them on to sheets; crunching data on woodcock or dormice sub - mitted by thousands of volunteers. Hundreds of comparativ­e plots– old, young, native, non-native, managed, unmanaged, open, afforested – reveal the difference forests and their management make to wildlife.

The results are clear. Spruce is far from life less, and harvesting far from disastrous. Our working conifers support abundant life, and have allowed threatened forest specialist­s such as wood ant, crossbill, ferns, fungi and lichens to recolonise from tiny ancient woodland fragments.

Native trees are undoubtedl­y of vital importance. Oak hosts an incredible 555 species never or rarely found elsewhere. So it’s vital all working forests include a native component, a piece of universal practice adopted around the panda jumper era.

Yet the difference between native and non-native was far less marked than I expected. For most wildlife, it’s the presence of a forest that’s import an t . Man ag e men t mat te rs mor e than tree species.

Biodiversi­t y, Forestr y and Wood is not just a literature review. Confor has 1,500 members working in forests across the UK. My childhood forest exploratio­n was life - changing, so how much could be learned from their wealth of daily experience over decades, with forests growing around them and wildlife par t of their office?

One such practition­er is John Little, a forest manager with Tilhill, who

has worked in Argyll for 30 years. He has seen hen harriers and sea eagles colonise as forests mature, along with red squirrels and signs of their predators, pine marten and wildcat. He is always struck by the contrast in birdsong between forest and the rough grazing it replaced. His new woodland schemes and har vesting and restocking plans ensure microhabit­ats such as ancient woodland, wetland and species-rich grassland are identified, protected and expanded within forest designs. “My observatio­n, as a working forest manager over many years, is that forestr y delivers a significan­t improvemen­t for biodiversi­ty,” says John.

I don’t have that experience: my forest impression­s have been glimpses of green brightenin­g my urban life. But through practition­ers’ experience­s and ecologists’ studies, I have f o u n d t h o s e g l i mp s e s we r e t r u e . Reforestat­ion does solve two problems at once: supplying the renewable, low-carbon wood we so desperatel­y need, and restoring nature.

Dr Eleanor Harris is Confor’s Policy Researcher

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 ??  ?? 0 Red squirrels thrive in managed forests in Argyll
0 Red squirrels thrive in managed forests in Argyll

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