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FEATURES<br />

Bog mosses find a<br />

new home at Warcop<br />

never been undertaken in the North<br />

Pennines before and 150 bags full of<br />

bog mosses were successfully collected<br />

and spread in the water channels at<br />

Warcop. The sphagnum will soak up<br />

excess water, hold water during the<br />

drier months and grow and expand to<br />

cover nearby areas of bare peat.<br />

Wooden dams installed to slow running water © Alistair Lockett<br />

Sphagnum mosses, also known as bog<br />

mosses, are amazingly multi-coloured<br />

plants that form a protective carpet<br />

across a healthy peatland. They keep<br />

the peat wet, prevent it from eroding<br />

and they are vital for the accumulation<br />

of peat. As a healthy sphagnum<br />

covered peatland accumulates, it takes<br />

in and stores huge amounts of carbon,<br />

much more than any woodland of the<br />

same size. However, if a peatland has<br />

lost its vegetation for one reason or<br />

another, instead of taking in and<br />

storing carbon it releases it into the<br />

atmosphere which contributes to<br />

climate change. It is estimated that a<br />

hectare of bare peat releases 31 tonnes<br />

of C02 every year. This is equivalent to<br />

flying from London to Sydney, and<br />

back again, three times.<br />

Bare peat restoration began on Warcop<br />

Military Range in 2013, organised and<br />

funded by the North Pennines AONB<br />

Partnership (see article in Sanctuary<br />

2013). This work will restore 25ha of<br />

bare and eroding peatland into a<br />

healthy and functioning peatland, with<br />

a good cover of sphagnum moss. Initial<br />

works included installing wooden<br />

dams along eroding channels, which<br />

slow running water, raise the water<br />

table adjacent to the channels and trap<br />

any peat that is being washed down<br />

the channel.<br />

The second stage of this work involved<br />

moving large amounts of sphagnum<br />

moss from a donor site in<br />

Northumberland to its new home at<br />

Warcop. A project of this scale has<br />

The bare peat areas will now be<br />

monitored for the next ten years and<br />

already there are positive signs of<br />

improvement. During a recent survey,<br />

vegetation cover has increased from<br />

an average of 10% to 18% over just<br />

one growing season. The hope is that<br />

this trend will continue and the area<br />

will be well on its way to becoming a<br />

healthy blanket bog after the project<br />

has finished.<br />

Emma Taylor, Peatland Programme<br />

Field Offcer said: “ Warcop is a huge<br />

upland site and we have only just<br />

scratched the surface of what could be<br />

done to restore these damaged peatlands.<br />

The MOD and Landmarc staff fully<br />

support the work and it is uplif ting to see<br />

results af ter such a short space of time. We<br />

hope to continue to work in partnership<br />

with the MOD to restore other damaged<br />

areas of the fell as long as there is<br />

available funding.”<br />

Alistair Lockett<br />

Field Offcer<br />

North Pennines AONB Partnership<br />

Peatlands provide many ecosystem<br />

benefits to both local and the wider<br />

population. Not only does a healthy<br />

peatland mitigate against climate<br />

change by taking in and storing<br />

carbon, it plays an important role in<br />

water quality and supply. For example,<br />

70% of the UK’s drinking water comes<br />

from the uplands. Peatlands are also<br />

nationally and internationally<br />

important for declining and globally<br />

threatened species including lapwing,<br />

curlew and golden plover.<br />

Sphagnum growth behind wooden dam, one year after it was transplanted © Emma Taylor<br />

Sanctuary 44 • 2015<br />

21

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