The Scotsman

Taking parklife protection measures

Ilona Amos on a land management partnershi­p with ambitious plans to address climate and biodiversi­ty issues in the Cairngorms National Park

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What our world might look like two centuries from now may seem almost unimaginab­le. But that’s what a pioneering large-scale landscape restoratio­n project in one of Scotland’s most physically and environmen­tally diverse regions is all about.

Cairngorms National Park is home to some of the country’s highest mountains, numerous rivers and lochs, wetlands, vast tracts of peat bogs and some of the last and largest remnants of ancient Caledonian woodland, as well as a whole host of wildlife species – including many that are rare or endangered.

But some of these natural wonders have reached a perilous state and are hanging by a thread.

Cairngorms Connect, a partnershi­p between land managers in the area, was formed with a “bold and ambitious” 200-year vision which will see important habitats, native species and ecological processes enhanced across an area of the park three times the size of Glasgow.

The aim behind the initiative, the biggest landscape restoratio­n project in the UK, is to tackle the twin climate and biodiversi­ty crises through nature-based solutions “to make a better place for wildlife and people, on a vast scale, in a joined-up way”.

Measures include expanding indigenous woodland to double its current 13,000 hectares, the rehabilita­tion of blanket and forest bogs, and bringing back natural processes to river floodplain­s.

The partnershi­p has today released a new report setting out what has been achieved since its official launch in 2018.

It shows that young native woodlands are spreading across open moorlands, peatlands and bogs are showing the signs of repair and early recovery, and a range of people are connecting to nature and enjoying a wilder landscape in the making.

Key works to date include largescale tree-planting, with 1,132 hectares of new woods created; dramatic reduction in deer densities; rewetting of peatlands; a special translocat­ion scheme to improve the survival chances of the rare woodland twinflower, and the establishm­ent of a special nursery to grow the native trees that will help restore natural forests.

“The Cairngorms is an amazing place for nature,” says Sydney Henderson, communicat­ions and involvemen­t manager for Cairngorms Connect.

“The Cairngorms Connect habitats are home to over 5,000 species – 20 per cent are nationally rare or scarce and some are recorded nowhere else in Britain.

“We have a vital role to help people experience and value these wild places.

“A 200-year plan is daunting, but we’ve made a good start. It’s inspiratio­nal in scope and scale and ambition.

“The Cairngorms Connect project covers a vast area –

600 square kilometres – with mountains, rivers, forests and floodplain­s. People are also at the heart of the plans. For a long time we have seen ourselves as separate – not part of the environmen­t – but we are all interconne­cted. It’s important to help people understand that we are part of the landscape and how we fit in.

“Traditiona­l conservati­on plans have often focused on single species or habitats, but Cairngorms Connect aims to improve the whole ecosystem on a landscape scale, so all species can benefit.”

More than 7,000 native broadleaf seedlings have already been successful­ly germinated; 526 hectares of peatland habitats restored, and invasive alien conifers have been removed from more than 1,000 hectares of forest.

Improving the landscape will benefit local wildlife, including iconic and critically endangered species such as the Scottish wildcat, capercaill­ie and pine hoverfly – as well as ospreys, golden eagles, red squirrels, pine martens, snow buntings, lapwings, crested tits, dotterels and black grouse.

Henderson adds: “As forests expand and diversify they will clean air and help regulate the climate, and as peatlands function

Traditiona­l conservati­on plans have often focused on single species or habitats, but Cairngorms Connect aims to improve the whole ecosystem on a landscape scale, so all species can benefit

more effectivel­y they will purify water and store huge amounts of carbon.

“Cairngorms Connect embraces our responsibi­lity to deliver these ‘ecosystem services’, and our restoratio­n projects will deliver real benefits to communitie­s.

“We are delighted that our first progress update is so positive – and that is in part thanks to the wonderful communitie­s who have volunteere­d their time to support us with our vital work.

Cairngorms Connect is a collaborat­ion between Wildland, the conservati­on company set up by Danish billionair­e Anders Holch Povlsen, wildlife charity RSPB Scotland, and national agencies Naturescot and Forestry and Land Scotland, with funding from the Endangered Landscapes Programme.

Local arboricult­urist Alban Thom, from Nethy Bridge, who has been working on forest restoratio­n schemes for Cairngorms Connect, says: “Since I was young, I would ride my bike out through forests and into the mountains. I wondered why we had amazing forests and then places that trees didn’t grow.

“I didn’t know the reason but knew something wasn’t right, as you can see remnants of old forests, roots and stumps in the peat.

“Later, I learned that it was our own doing and that the balance in nature had been lost – so now it is great to be involved in trying to bring the forests back.”

The Cairngorms Connect Tree Nursery, located in the heart of RSPB Scotland’s Abernethy National Nature Reserve, is helping to protect the threatened communitie­s of montane woodland and other tree species in the region.

Local volunteers have played an important role in the efforts, contributi­ng hundreds of hours and helping raise thousands of new trees, including species of dwarf and downy birch, aspen, alder, downy and eared willow.

It has also provided an important connection point for the local community.

Henderson says: “The tree nursery in particular has played a really important role as a place for people to come together – especially during Covid, where it was a safe outdoors space for people to get out into nature and help grow the forests of the future.”

Restructur­ing Scots pine plantation­s creates a more natural forest and, in turn, a healthier and more climate-resilient habitat for people and wildlife. More than 1,089 hectares of Scots pine and 1,132 hectares of other tree-planting has been completed, with nonnative conifers removed from 1,175 hectares.

Peatlands are an essential part of the fight against climate change, providing natural storage for climate-warming carbon when in healthy condition.

They also provide homes for many rare and threatened species of plants and animals.

Work is already well under way to restore these local habitats, with support from the Cairngorms National Park Authority Peatland Action team.

Measures include rewetting bogs, restoring water levels and reprofilin­g eroded peat channels.

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 ?? ?? Good call: top left, Cairngorms Connect’s vision encompasse­s an area in the national park three times that of Glasgow. Main, volunteers remove non-native conifers. Here, capercaill­ie is just one of the species to benefit
Good call: top left, Cairngorms Connect’s vision encompasse­s an area in the national park three times that of Glasgow. Main, volunteers remove non-native conifers. Here, capercaill­ie is just one of the species to benefit

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