Yorkshire Post

Native woods and trees are facing ‘barrage’ of threats to their survival

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THEY FORM the beating heart of the country, yet the UK’s woods and trees are facing a “barrage” of threats from climate change, habitat damage and pollution, pushing them to crisis point.

Just seven per cent of the country’s native woodland is in a good ecological condition, a report into the state of the UK’s woods and trees by the Woodland Trust has concluded.

Native woods and trees can help curb carbon emissions and reverse declines in wildlife, but failing to address the problems they face will undermine efforts to tackle climate and nature crises, the charity warned.

The Government has plans to plant 30,000 hectares of trees a year by 2025 across the UK to tackle climate change.

But Abi Bunker, the Trust’s director of conservati­on and external affairs, said there was “no success in hitting creation targets if our existing woods and trees are struggling and in decline”.

Woods and trees face a barrage of threats including imported diseases, invasive plants and direct loss of woodland to developmen­t, while what remains is fragmented, the report said.

All woodlands in England, and most in other parts of the UK, exceed harmful levels on nitrogen pollution, changing the natural make-up of the habitat by damaging delicate lichens and helping grass outcompete wildflower­s.

And climate change is shifting the pattern of the seasons, so spring is happening around 8.4 days earlier, affecting wildlife such as blue tits which can find their breeding cycles now mismatch food supply for chicks.

In light of the report’s findings, the charity called for efforts to quadruple woodland creation, restore ancient woods, remove invasive species such as rhododendr­on at a landscape scale and tackle air pollution.

The Woodland Trust is calling for legally binding targets in the Environmen­t Bill to restore nature including precious ancient woodland – areas where there have been woods since at least 1600.

And it wants to see ambitious, effective and well-funded woodland policies and grants for landowners and communitie­s to look after existing woods and ensure native woods are a major part of expansion efforts – rather than leaving it to the market to create conifer plantation­s.

Ms Bunker said: “We take them for granted because of their longevity, they are resilient and they have been resilient over millennia, some of them, and hundreds of years, but there’s only so much they can cope with.”

We take them for granted because of their longevity.

Abi Bunker, the Woodland Trust’s director of conservati­on and external affairs.

 ?? PICTURES: PA. ?? TAKEN FOR GRANTED: From bluebells in springtime to the autumn colours of trees, woodlands are a constant source of delight. But the Woodland Trust is warning that the UK’s woods and trees are facing a barrage of threats that will undermine efforts to tackle climate and nature crises.
PICTURES: PA. TAKEN FOR GRANTED: From bluebells in springtime to the autumn colours of trees, woodlands are a constant source of delight. But the Woodland Trust is warning that the UK’s woods and trees are facing a barrage of threats that will undermine efforts to tackle climate and nature crises.
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