Yorkshire Post

Coalfield haven for rare songbird

‘Not-so-pretty’ landscapes of former pits and railway lines are making a valuable contributi­on to wildlife

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ruby.kitchen@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

A RARE songbird whose numbers plummeted despite conservati­on efforts was later found to have found a refuge in the region’s regenerate­d coalfields.

Former coal pits and abandoned railway lines have proved among the most favoured spaces for Britain’s fastest declining resident bird species, the willow tit.

Now as conservati­on projects across South Yorkshire draw to a close following four years of monitoring, there are calls for a redefiniti­on of the success in rejuvenati­ng such spaces.

“These are habitats which are often viewed as low value,” said Sophie Pinder, of the Back From the Brink Project, which has been charting the birds’ progress. “They may not be majestic, ancient woodlands, but are equally as valuable.

“This could be a totally different look at conservati­on,” she added. “Getting the public behind the value of these ‘not-sopretty’ landscapes is vital to these species.”

The willow tit, Britain’s fastest declining resident bird species, has dropped in numbers by 94 per cent since the 1970s, research has found.

Conservati­on projects in South Yorkshire, aimed at protecting the bird, recorded a decline in the species over recent years with numbers more than halving since 2015.

Much has been learned as part of the Heritage Lottery-funded Back From the Brink project from the RSPB and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust, launched in 2017 and now beginning to close.

Teams have been surveying the region’s willow tits to track their location. There were 70 pairs known to reside in the Dearne Valley in 2015, but following the Beast from the East storm in 2018 this then fell to fewer than two dozen.

While this has revived somewhat to around 35 pairs, it is still half what it was. Dramatic declines have been less acute in post-industrial areas, revealed Ms Pinder, with the birds drawn to spaces such as Carlton Marsh nature reserve in Barnsley, a former railway junction which has a ‘mosaic’ of wetland, scrub and woodland habitat, and a former pit top at Rabbit Ings Country Park.

A key finding, she added, was in the volume of space the birds need as a breeding pair, and that they follow linear passages such as abandoned railway lines when searching for a mate. “All the former collieries and pit sites that degraded naturally have become key habitats,” she said. “We need to be creating a lot more of these spaces.”

A vast network of old canals and disused railway lines across South Yorkshire has inspired a natural regenerati­on of tree species such as birch and elder, Ms Pinder explained. “It’s all part of a functionin­g ecological system,” she said. “Now it’s about valuing these things that aren’t always pretty, and changing perception­s, for landowners in particular.

“Of all the positives of the project, it’s that understand­ing of the willow tits’ needs which is important. We need to look at these post-industrial landscapes and see it’s not a wasteland – it is evolving into something quite special.

“For a generation of people who saw the closures of the mining industry, there is a connection with these landscapes,” she added. “That now is really special and really viable for nature.”

These postindust­rial landscapes are evolving. Sophie Pinder, of the Back From the Brink Project,

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 ?? MAIN PICTURE: SIMON HULME. ?? NATURE WATCH: Main and inset, Sophie Pinder, of the Back From the Brink Project, at Rabbit Ings Country Park, Barnsley, a haven for the willow tit, photograph­ed above by Geoff Carr and below by Anthony Wetherhill.
MAIN PICTURE: SIMON HULME. NATURE WATCH: Main and inset, Sophie Pinder, of the Back From the Brink Project, at Rabbit Ings Country Park, Barnsley, a haven for the willow tit, photograph­ed above by Geoff Carr and below by Anthony Wetherhill.
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