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Suffolk Natural History, Vol. 37 BUCKETS OF BIODIVERSITY ROGER MITCHELL AND DAVE STONE
Roger Mitchell began:It can be said that English Nature fulfils both parts of this title in that we both garden and play God. By ‘playing God’ I mean that we have the authority through licensing and other statutory duties to regulate quite a lot of what happens or does not happen to species. Hopefully Barbara Young will elaborate more on this point in her talk and in doing so she will prove that God is a woman as she is our chairman. Dave and I will address the issue of gardening on different size plots. I will start with a brief history of English Nature’s Species Recovery Programme (SRP) and then go on to look at a few projects to illustrate what we do, why we do it and perhaps leave a few questions hanging for the discussion later. My first slide illustrates Bronze Age Villages. - Let’s consider the first few thousand years that preceded the SRP. Its now accepted that as the ice left Britain man colonised in a big way, clearing and farming the land. This slide shows our Bronze Age ancestors modifying their landscape in Peterborough close to our present day office, - in fact I think that is our office! Not only were the habitats modified but re-introductions took place both deliberately and accidentally. Man certainly moved crop plants around, his culinary herbs and his medicinal plants too and accidentally moved around other seeds and invertebrates. Both domesticated and wild animals will also have been moved by farmers and traders. The modification of our landscape and the pattern of plant and animal populations continued apace and, last year here, Oliver Rackham illustrated this in his talk about interpreting the history of the countryside from what we see today. The next slide is of Constable’s ‘Haywain’ - Constable’s landscapes are often held as the glowing ideal to which we should attempt to return, but intervention was underway then too. The Haywain was probably planked with wood from the black poplar tree, like the one in the background of the picture, but as man controlled riverine flooding this tree lost its habitat and natural colonisation began to fail. It was thus increasingly introduced whilst its wood provided a valued commodity. (Earlier to the west of Windsor Park French Oaks were introduced to replace the English Oaks which were felled to build our fighting naval ships.) By the time that John Constable died in 1836, another change was occurring as the first grey squirrels had been spotted in Wales some eight years before. A late change in this Haywain scene was the barraging of the River Stour downstream in the early 1970s so that the grey mullet no longer swim up to Flatford Mill. The purpose of this brief introduction is to illustrate the context of change in our landscapes and species over thousands of years - translocations and habitat management is very definitely not a new phenomenon. However, the real difference is that some of the changes sought in more recent times were for nature conservation rather than for building material, food or fancy. For example, the large copper butterfly became extinct in the UK in 1851 but was subsequently reintroduced using Dutch stock to Woodwalton Fen in 1927.
Trans. Suffolk Nat. Soc. 37 (2001)