Burning the moors is allowed at certain times of the year to
aid heather growth and is done to help increase numbers of red grouse on
sporting estates.
The RSPB said its study, which used aerial photography and
satellite images, showed conservation areas were being damaged. Burning was
detected in 55% of Special Areas of Conservation and 63% of Special Protection
Areas assessed in the study, said the conservation charity. Such sites are
designated by the EU for their conservation importance, and governments are
charged with protecting them from damage and ensuring they are restored. In
Scotland and England, the study found a third of burning took place on deep
peat soils, an important carbon store. These upland areas are also a vital
water source, supplying around 70 per cent of drinking water and burning has
been linked to poor water quality, requiring large sums of money to treat.
Dr David Douglas, senior conservation scientist at RSPB
Scotland and lead author of the study, said: "Upland ecosystems are highly
sensitive to burning practices.”
Martin Harper, the charity’s director of conservation, said:
“Many of our uplands are in poor condition, due to intensive land management
practices. It’s very worrying that burning is increasing, given the damage it
can cause and that it occurs in many of our conservation areas. Governments and
statutory agencies across Britain need to take action to reduce burning in our
uplands rather than allowing them to be increasingly damaged year on year.”
The Committee on Climate Change’s 2015 progress report to
parliament notes: “Wetland habitats, including the majority of upland areas
with carbon-rich peat soils, are in poor condition. The damaging practice of
burning peat to increase grouse yields continues, including on internationally
protected sites.” They are home to a diverse range of wildlife and up to 8,000
years old. And, according to a damning analysis by an independent government
advisory body, the UK’s upland peat bogs are facing a sustained threat from the
shooting classes’ desire to bag grouse.
With clients paying more than £150 to bag only a single
brace of grouse, estate owners know that delivering a plentiful supply of
targets makes sound business sense. It also adds to their considerable net
worth because the capital value of a grouse moor is based on its grouse population.
The birds are valued at anything between £2,500 and £5,000 a brace.
“It probably is fair to say there has been more burning in
recent years compared to the preceding decade, and a lot of that is to do with
reinvestment in estates because new entrepreneurs are coming in,” said Amanda
Anderson, director of the Moorland Association. “A lot of the estates are
getting back to their prewar potential. They’re possibly at their optimal level
now [in terms of burning].”
According to the RSPB, some 76,000 hectares, or 27% of the
UK’s blanket bog, have already lost peat-forming vegetation due to regular
burning. In a briefing produced last year, the society claimed: “If we don’t
restore upland peatlands, CO2 emissions from degraded peatlands are likely to
increase by 30% for every 1C rise in average global temperature. Peatlands with
healthy ecosystems are by contrast expected to be relatively robust to climate
change.”
Pat Thompson, senior uplands policy officer at the RSPB, said it was time to rethink the burning of Britain’s countryside: “It is
utterly perverse to me that we are degrading our uplands in a way that benefits
the minority rather than society as a whole.”
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