TOG24 is supporting Yorkshire Wildlife Trust with their Wild Ingleborough appeal, to save nationally important landscape
Wild Ingleborough
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust is appealing for support to restore and protect Ingleborough’s nationally-important limestone grasslands and limestone pavements, and the unique flowers and plants found there.
A unique landscape
Ingleborough is the only place in the world that the tiny white stars of Yorkshire sandwort are found, just one of four places in the UK you can see Teesdale violets, and one of just two places in Yorkshire where purple saxifrage grows.
Ingleborough’s limestone pavements are so unusual that they host rare holly ferns, lichens and mosses, as well as patches of sweet-smelling wild thyme and rock-rose, the main food source of the rare northern brown argus butterfly.
“Ingleborough provides a critical haven for some of Yorkshire’s rarest limestone plants to flourish, and has the potential to be one of the most important limestone landscapes in the world. There is so much hope for the future of Wild Ingleborough and the wildlife that could thrive there if given more opportunity. Our partnership work, skills and expertise have the potential to make a real difference on a truly significant scale - but we are now in a race against time to save some of the last remnants of this area’s most vulnerable plants.”
Rachael Bice, CEO of Yorkshire Wildlife Trust.
Restoring nature
It is estimated that Ingleborough and its surrounding landscape is home to a third of the UK’s plant species. The Trust is cultivating the rarest of these limestone flowers, shrubs and trees at a special montane nursery where volunteers will help nurture plants from seed to plant back out into the landscape.
The Wild Ingleborough partnership team have also trialled harvesting and spraying fern spores from rare ferns directly into the limestone pavement grykes, and have abseiled down some of the mountain’s cliff faces to collect seeds from hard-to-reach plants.
At present, these rare species and habitats are confined to a few pockets of space across the mountain, offering very little resilience to changing weather conditions or threats, and making them highly vulnerable to more severe weather and the effects of climate change.
The Trust, with the help of partners and landowners has plans to connect up wilder spaces spanning from the valleys right up to the top of Ingleborough itself, where wildlife can expand and flourish, and to restore and manage these connected places in such a way that these rarer species are given the best chance of survival.
Natural England have recently bought new land to extend the Ingleborough National Nature Reserve to protect more space for wildlife, and Yorkshire Wildlife Trust has recently bought two new nature reserves in the area – Ashes Shaw and Bellfield’s Pasture – thanks to generosity from the local community and supporters. Work has also begun to restore and reconnect 1300 hectares of fragmented limestone grassland, upland woodland, peatland and limestone pavement to provide a greater space for nature to thrive.
“With its flourishing limestone grasslands, home to colourful and abundant wildlife, Wild Ingleborough is an impressive landscape-scale restoration programme in the Yorkshire Dales that is on the cusp of reaching new heights for nature and climate resilience. At its heart is the soon-to-be-extended Ingleborough National Nature Reserve, acting as a battery pack for the Nature Recovery Network across the Dales and beyond, where internationally significant populations of wild plants thrive on some of England’s last remaining limestone habitat.”
Tony Juniper, Chair of Natural England
Show your support
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust is the county’s leading wildlife charity and has been protecting and restoring habitats for over 75 years; for wildlife, for people to enjoy and to help manage the impacts of a changing climate. There is so much hope for the future of Wild Ingleborough and its wildlife, but it depends on the support from people who care.