Western Morning News

Dormice make themselves at home at donkey sanctuary

The secretive mammals are nesting in a conservati­on area, reports Athwenna Irons

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ONE of the UK’s rarest mammals appears to be thriving in a wildlife-rich Devon woodland that is usually home to hundreds of donkeys.

Signs that hazel dormice were nesting have been found in specially built boxes during routine checks in Pig Wood at The Donkey Sanctuary’s Paccombe Farm.

Close to the charity’s internatio­nal headquarte­rs in Sidmouth, Paccombe Farm is home to around 400 donkeys as well as 90 acres of woodland boasting rare bats, butterflie­s and birds.

Staff and volunteers from The Donkey Sanctuary’s ecology and conservati­on team installed dormouse, bird and bat boxes across the Pig Wood site adjacent to Paccombe Wood a few years ago. During the autumn box checks, staff were delighted to discover several juvenile dormice as well as nests in six boxes.

Ruth Angell, ecology and conservati­on manager at The Donkey Sanctuary, said: “Hazel dormouse population­s are vulnerable to habitat fragmentat­ion and degradatio­n.

“Finding them apparently doing well at The Donkey Sanctuary is fantastic and reinforces the importance of continuing to care for our seminatura­l habitats to support this and many other wildlife species.

“Thanks to our volunteers, we are able to carry out a range of field surveys and practical conservati­on tasks which really benefit our local wildlife and help inform our management.”

Hazel dormice are officially classed as vulnerable in the UK and their population­s have plummeted by more than 50% since 2000, according to the State of Britain’s Dormice 2019 report published by wildlife charity People’s Trust for Endangered Species (PTES). Their decline is being caused by the loss of quality woodland habitat and climate change.

The Donkey Sanctuary is carrying out work that will support the dormouse population at Paccombe such as hedge, woodland and scrub management which, as well as helping dormice also benefits the donkeys by providing them with woody browse material to chew and eat.

Dormice are now mainly confined to Wales and Southern England.

The Donkey Sanctuary team will continue to monitor the boxes to gain a picture of how this site is used with the informatio­n gathered included as part of the National Dormouse Monitoring Programme (NDMP), a scheme designed to monitor dormouse population­s.

Ian White, dormouse and training officer from PTES, who manages the NDMP, explained: “The National Dormouse Monitoring Programme has been running since 1990 and there are over 400 sites contributi­ng data to the scheme. Without it we would not know that hazel dormice continue to decline rapidly in the UK, across much, if not all, of the country. It is also thanks to the NDMP and volunteers – like those at The Donkey Sanctuary – that we know in areas where the right habitat exists, dormice are doing well.

“The NDMP provides the evidence base on which we are able to press strongly for continued and further conservati­on action to help this endearing species.”

He added: “It is wonderful that a charity dedicated to improving the welfare of domesticat­ed mules and donkeys is also able to help with the conservati­on of hazel dormice – a small, native secretive rodent whose population­s are in steep decline. We hope their dormouse population continues to thrive in East Devon and hopefully one day spread further afield too.”

Staff and volunteers at The Donkey Sanctuary manage Paccombe Wood to improve biodiversi­ty. This includes removing invasive vegetation, hazel coppicing and opening up the tree canopy in the form of wide open pathways and glades, which encourage a wide range of plants which then supports insects and other wildlife.

 ?? Clare Pengelly / PTES ?? Dormice have suffered a steep population decline over recent decades
Clare Pengelly / PTES Dormice have suffered a steep population decline over recent decades

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