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More than half of Ireland and Britain's native plants in decline

More than half of Ireland and Britain's native plants in decline
Harebells

By Danny Halpin, PA Environment Correspondent

More than half of Ireland and Britain's native plants have declined since the 1950s because of agriculture, climate change and non-native invasive species, a new report has found.

The 20-year research project, titled Plant Atlas 2020 and published by the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland (BSBI), also found that non-native plant species now outnumber native ones.

While climate change has helped some species to spread north, such as the bee orchid, it is forcing mountain plants like the snow pearlwort to retreat.

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The entire British population of this species now lives only on the snow-capped peaks of Ben Lawers in the Scottish Highlands.

Changes since the 1950s

Changes in agriculture since the 1950s have negatively impacted other habitats on which wild plants depend, the report said.

Nitrogen enrichment, habitat degradation and changes in grazing pressure have led to the decline of species such as heather and harebell, while damp meadows being drained have caused a substantial decline in Devil’s-bit scabious.

The researchers also said that 62 per cent of Britain’s ancient arable wildflowers such as corn marigold have declined because traditional grasslands have been reseeded or over-fertilised.

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Sitka spruce regenerating
Sitka spruce has spread from its commercial plantations to peaty soils (Kevin Walker/PA)

Peatland habitats, which act as important stores of carbon, are being impacted by species such as Sitka spruce – a North American conifer that has spread from commercial plantations to peaty soils and is reducing their ability to store carbon.

Sitka spruce has spread further than any other species recorded in the project and the botanists said it will have to be carefully managed to protect peatland habitats and carbon stores.

Dr Kevin Walker, BSBI head of science and Plant Atlas 2020 co-author, said: “There are lots we can do to reverse these declines, but the most important are to increase the protection plants receive, extend the habitat available to them, and place their needs at the very heart of nature conservation.

“We also need to ensure that our land, water and soil are managed more sustainably so that plants, and the species which rely upon them for food and shelter, can thrive.”

Plant Atlas 2020 is the most in-depth survey of British and Irish flora ever undertaken, BSBI said.

It contains 30 million plant records of 3,445 species collected by almost 9,000 botanists and builds on two previous surveys conducted during the 20th century.

In total, 53 per cent of Britain’s native plants are in decline, with nine species lost since 1930 and a further 10 species known to have been lost before then.

Across the Irish Sea, botanists found that 56 per cent of Ireland’s native species have declined in range and abundance or both.

Snow pearlwort on Ben Lawers
Snow pearlwort has been pushed back to the summit of Ben Lawers in the Scottish Highlands because of climate change and competition from other species, researchers said (Sarah Watts/PA)

Native grassland plants have suffered the most but many lake or wetland plants have also declined, with farming and forestry destroying many habitats on which wild Irish plants depend, the report said.

Craig Bennett, chief executive of The Wildlife Trusts, said: “The decline of our beautiful native plants is heart-breaking and has consequences for us all.

“The loss of natural habitats due to modern farming methods over the last 70 years has been an unmitigated disaster for wildflowers and all the species that depend on them including insects, bats and birds. But it’s not too late to stop this catastrophe.

“The Government’s new farm environment schemes must do what was originally promised and reverse the decline of nature in our agricultural landscape.

 

“Also, protection for Local Wildlife Sites needs to be increased, and the promise made by the Government at the recent UN biodiversity summit to halve nutrient pollution by 2030 must be honoured.”

The National Farmers’ Union (NFU) environment forum chair Richard Bramley said: “Our farmers are committed to enhancing and improving our landscapes and working to benefit our soil, watercourses and wildlife in a rapidly changing world with huge external pressures.

“In recent decades, farmers have made huge improvements in several areas that this report highlights. For example, more than 10,000 football pitches of habitat have been planted to benefit wildlife such as pollinators.

“British farmers are committed to delivering net-zero agriculture by 2040, and the NFU remains committed to working with Defra (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) to improve its Environmental Land Management offer so the schemes can deliver the statutory environmental targets Government ministers recently agreed.

“It’s in all our interests to ensure sustainable, climate friendly British farming in the future, with farmers producing food alongside their work in maintaining and protecting the environment.”

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