Habitat Management

 Our passion is conservation and  habitat management with a team of specialists in this field we employ systems that encourage new wildlife into an area from specialist planting to maintaining wildlife corridors as to attract butterflies, Stag Beatles, Toads, and birds of prey this all makes for a productive ecosystem. For example Dead wood is an essential component of woodland ecosystems. The deadwood resource includes standing and fallen trees of various sizes, dead branches still attached to living trees, rot holes, heart rot, fallen branches and stumps. Large volume standing and fallen deadwood is particularly valuable for some invertebrates. Standing and fallen deadwood should be left in situ in order to provide an unbroken succession, which is vital for many species. It should be increased where lacking, and kept intact unless a proper risk assessment shows safety to be compromised. This is a small part of habitat management, we would be happy to discuss and put a habitat creation plan in place.

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