West Sussex County Times

Excitement over Wilder Horsham project

- By Morag Warrack

orsham District Council has acknowledg­ed the huge importance of wild nature in all our lives by creating a five-year partnershi­p with the Sussex Wildlife Trust which will link wildlife corridors across the District.

This is a trailblaze­r project for the UK and was voted for unanimousl­y by HDC.

Mapping wildlife movement along waterways, land and in the air then filling in missing connection­s is the aim of this exciting new project.

Henri Brockleban­k, the trust’s director of conservati­on, told Horsham Green Spaces: “We are providing training for councillor­s who have a wide range of ideas, interests and knowledge. This is an incredibly positive project and already other local authoritie­s are saying, ‘We want a recovery network, too’. With the Government’s new white paper on planning currently under review, all environmen­tal bodies will have to work together to help our nature networks.”

She explained that Sussex is the richest habitat in Europe for bat species, and bats use hedgerows like roads! No hedgerows means bats are not able to move from one location to the next, inevitably causing their decline.

Rich Black and Chloe Harrison have

Red River

been appointed to run the project, initially focusing on land around the Rivers Ouse, Adur and Arun in the south while urban developmen­t is skewed towards the north, as plans for developmen­t continue to be controvers­ial. Although urban gardens are increasing­ly becoming home to hardpresse­d wildlife, highly developed areas need more support to preserve large tranches of land to enable movement of larger species. This presents a great opportunit­y to enhance what biodiversi­ty already exists at no cost, simply by leaving Rookwood out of current plans.

‘Blue corridors’ are a primary focus. Altering the course of straight waterways to provide natural river habitats is also a great way to slow water flow and help prevent flooding and the irreplacea­ble loss of soil that goes with it. (It takes a minimum of a hundred years for new soil to form so there’s no quick fix!)

Veteran trees need to be mapped, but the HDC tree officer has reached capacity, and only health and safety work is being undertaken. There is little baseline data available and funds are limited, so to enable the projects to go ahead efficientl­y, volunteers and community groups are increasing­ly welcome, helping HDC by becoming local experts. “There is a strict protocol for identifica­tion and recording of species, but encouragin­gly, the Sussex Biodiversi­ty Record Centre is particular­ly good”, said Rich.

Henri’s final message to HGS was: “Please help us to help Chloe and Rich make it all happen!”

www.horsham.gov.uk/parks-andcountry­side/volunteeri­ng-in-our-parksand-open-spaces

sussexwild­lifetrust.org.uk/getinvolve­d/volunteer

sussexgree­nliving.co.uk

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