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Conservation
For centuries the landscape of Wharfedale was shaped, in part, by
traditional farming methods. In medieval times these used low intensity
methods to produce both crops and livestock but the great monasteries
of Fountains, Rievaulx and Bolton Priory had large sheep flocks
and sold their wool on the European market.
When the monasteries were dissolved, and wool
prices fell, many tenant farmers took to cattle and sheep rearing.
However, even at the end of the 17th century there was still a great
deal of small-scale arable production. By the early nineteenth century
there was a demand for food from the growing industrial towns and
farmers and many farms began to produce milk from the lower lands
and use the higher fells for sheep. The limestone grassland was
favoured for cattle (and horses in the days when these were numerous)
for summer grazing. Cows sent there are free of mastitis, and they
come down ready to calve, "thatched with beef, full of hair, and
with a rare bloom" as one farmer picturesquely described them.
So, although changes occurred over time, they were slow. There were
a few large landowners but the idea of investing capital to improve
returns, and the ability to do so, was alien to almost all. They
distrusted risk and relied on time-honoured practices. Wildlife
had plenty of time to adapt. But during the Second World War, farmers
were pressurised to produce, and grants were provided to do so.
Since then official policy has mostly been to improve productivity
at the expense of the environment. The Common Agricultural Policy
included grants to support agriculture in less-favoured areas and
in Britain these were angled to increase production. Wharfedale
has not been immune. Changes involved drainage, re-seeding, increasing
chemical fertiliser applications, and cutting meadows for silage
rather than hay.
The explosion of cash investment into the fragile ecosystems of
Dales farms has led to many problems related to more intensive farming
methods. But the loss of unproductive farms, with the land merged
with adjoining or nearby businesses, has produced 'gentrification'
and some homes are now occupied only at weekends. There are fewer
people looking after the land so labour-intensive jobs such as shepherding,
rebuilding walls and barns, maintaining woodland and so on tend
to go by the board. This can result in shortcuts, such as laying
poison, which endanger birds and animals.
One labour-intensive job now found no longer is pulling bracken.
In the past this was sometimes used as bedding material, and the
traditional mixed farming tended to prevent its spread, since cows
trampled it out. Modern concentration on sheep farming means that
bracken is spreading fast, a problem throughout much of the uplands.
Bracken is sometimes useful, where its tough rhizomes prevent soil
erosion and where it forms a habitat for some rare butterflies,
but mostly it spreads at the expense of grass and heathland and
forms a monoculture of little value. It also concentrates grazing
on the remaining grassland, already under pressure from overgrazing.
The extension of sheep flocks in the uplands has been a feature
of post-war agriculture. There are 60% more sheep in the Dales than
there were in 1960 and although many died in the foot and mouth
crisis, many have been replaced. At the same time shepherding has
almost ceased and so sheep are not moved around. Instead they stay
on the areas they like best and intensively graze areas of wildlife
interest. The increase in sheep-ranching has been accompanied by
a reduction in the number of cattle. Overgrazing is not the only
problem - the establishment of a sheep monoculture reduces habitats.
Associated operations can also be bad for wildlife - dipping sheep
to reduce scab is a normal part of farm life but the chemicals,
which are sometimes misused, pollute watercourses and kill small
organisms.
Official support, over two generations, for intensive agriculture
has resulted in much higher loads of fertiliser applied to quite
fragile ecosystems. This favours competitive species such as rye-grass,
at the expense of other grasses and wild flowers. Dales meadows
are valuable survivors of an earlier age of rich grassland, full
of herbs which can be important to livestock as sources of vitamins.
They rely on low level applications of natural fertilisers such
as animal manure. Cutting the meadows for hay late enough to allow
plants to seed lets the system perpetuate itself, rather than taking
constant silage.
Much effort and public money has been invested in drainage operations.
Moor gripping has created extensive areas of grassland, with the
loss of wetland plant and animal species. Now the drains are being
blocked and the boggy areas restored, but it takes time to restore
an ecosystem. Slowing water runoff helps to retain water, though,
reducing flooding and soil erosion, which is an important factor
in an increasingly unpredictable climate.
Britain has for centuries been sympathetic to planting trees but
in the uplands the old woodlands have recently had to contend with
sheep for possession. Woodland has been less profitable, even though
it is valuable as winter shelter for livestock, which nowadays are
often brought down into covered shelter anyway. In the Dales, Swaledale
and Wharfedale have more semi-natural woodland than other areas,
but this is still only 1 per cent of the whole National Park area.
Woodland has been modified over the years, by clearance, heavy stock
grazing and re-planting with non-native species. There is often
little diversity and a limited ground flora. Now work is afoot to
improve woodlands and to plant new areas. Again, this will reduce
soil erosion and flooding.
Much of the upper dale is divided by the stone
walls which are such an important feature, together with the stone
field barns. In the lower dale, however, hedgerows are the rule
and, although the pressure to remove them is less with grazing than
arable uses, the tendency, in the past, has been to pull them out
to save labour and take advantage of grant aid, destroying habitats
for birds and small mammals. Now grants are available to replant
hedges, but a new hedge takes centuries to regain its earlier diversity.
People are of course a problem in many ways. During the foot-and-mouth
crisis Wharfedale was not the only area where wildlife prospered
while people were excluded from the countryside. The introduction
of open access is of concern to many, not only gamekeepers. However,
many areas have already suffered by the construction of access tracks
bringing motor vehicles deep into the moorland and tourism, which
is promoted as a possible solution to falling farm incomes, can
lead to problems. The intense pressure on favoured paths, such as
the Pennine Way, or paths up well-known hills, can require expensive
repairs and wildlife is certain to suffer, particularly at weekends.
Nesting birds are at risk, especially when walkers fail to control
their dogs.
Some problems are not merely local but are no less
real for that. Airborne nitrates are an insidious form of pollution.
They are mostly derived from car exhausts and effectively fertilise
an area. Plants respond differently. Nitrates are toxic to some
mosses, which suffer tissue damage. On the other hand, grasses are
able to take up the fertiliser and shade out the rarer, more delicate
plants which are often seen as being of greater conservation value.
Increased grass growth attracts more sheep, which can damage other
plants by trampling. Thus the nitrate acts as a multiplier to existing
overgrazing. It also fertilises stream water and can lead to increased
growth of algae, which can rapidly 'bloom' and outgrow other water
plants.
Birds such as red grouse, stonechat, whinchat and golden plover
all prefer heather to breed and avoid the heavily-grazed grassy
areas which nitrate pollution produces.
The nitrates also form airborne acids. These were a major problem
throughout Europe in the 1970's, mainly from sulphur from burning
coal in power stations. Now power production is cleaner, sulphuric
acid is less of a problem but trees and plantlife, and the animals
and birds which depend on them, are still at risk. Lichens and bryophytes
are particularly prone to acid attack and Wharfedale is under the
polluted south-westerlies from the Lancashire conurbation.
The recognition of global warming has produced a flood of remedies,
mostly concentrating on the reduction of energy consumption. Recent
government action to produce a proportion of our energy from sustainable
sources has led to pressure on the countryside for sites for wind
turbines. While many of the wind farms we see at present are comparatively
small, up to 30 metres tall, economic energy production now demands
much bigger turbines, as much as 120 metres - 400 feet - tall.
The effects that such wind farms will have on wildlife are still
unclear and there has been little research to assess whether, for
instance, birds will be injured by such large and fast rotors. Certainly
there have been some accidents but the state of knowledge at present
is such that both sides can claim, both that turbines are safe,
and that they are a menace. It is therefore disappointing that government
wishes to introduce so many, so fast. While much of our area is
within the National Park, and part is within the Nidderdale Area
of Outstanding Natural Beauty, lower Wharfedale is not and will
probably be under pressure from wind farm developers. Under recent
changes in planning law, even these statutory designations may not
be enough to protect an area from turbines.
The introduction of alien species into the countryside has brought
some novel problems to conservationists. The best-known is perhaps
the establishment of grey squirrels, north American animals which
have edged out the native red squirrels, over the last century.
Another north American animal which has had a negative effect on
the existing wildlife is the mink, which has been accused of complicity
in the disappearance of dormice from many areas, although the similar
effect on water voles is of more relevance in Wharfedale.
The similarly north American signal crayfish is another unwanted
introduction. It is larger than the native white-clawed species
and out-competes it. Signal crayfish also carry crayfish plague,
which is fatal to the native crayfish. The Wharfe has populations
of signal crayfish and the few white-clawed remaining are at great
risk.
While many of these problems in conserving our area are well-established
and not easily solved, actions have been taken which will hopefully
lead to a better environment for our native wildlife. The Yorkshire
Dales National Park Authority takes a positive attitude to conservation
andhas introduced the Dales Woodland Strategy and the Farm Conservation
Scheme, which assists farmers to integrate their day-to-day activities
with conservation measures. National agri-environment schemes, such
as the Pennine Dales Environmentally Sensitive Area Scheme, which
covers part of the upper dale, and Countryside Stewardship and English
Nature's Wildlife Enhancement Scheme, have a major part to play.
Many of these strategies involve compensating for the grant aid
for intensification with offsetting conservation grants. However
a great deal can be done by education and advice, as with the Farming
and Wildlife Advisory Groups.
Non-official groups can also do much to help. The Yorkshire Wildlife
Trust runs reserves in the Dales, including Grass Wood at Grassington,
in maintaining and improving which Wharfedale Naturalists' have
always played a large part. The Woodland Trust has acquired woodland
and set up a programme to improve, extend and establish native woodlands
in the Dales. The Field Studies Council runs a Centre at Malham
and has done much in researching and conserving wildlife in Wharfedale.
But the best defence for our local wildlife is active, knowledgeable
and vocal local support - which is where Wharfedale Naturalists'
come in!
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Conservation
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