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Taking action
Documents to guide
planners and developers
and to inform everyone :


Habitat Action Plans
Acid Grassland
Canals
Chalk Grassland
Churchyards
Heathland
Parks & Green Spaces
Private Gardens
Reedbeds
Tidal Thames
Wasteland
Woodland

Species Action Plans
Bats
Black Poplar
Black Redstart
Grey Heron
House Sparrow
Mistletoe
Peregrine Falcon
Reptiles
Sand Martin
Stag Beetle
Tower Mustard
Water Vole

Statements
Exotic Flora
House Martin
Humble Bumble
Swifts

Generic actions
Generic action introduction
1. Site management
2. Habitat protection
3. Species protection
4. Ecological Monitoring
5. Biological recording
6. Communications
7. Funding
8. Built Structures
 
Parks and Green Spaces

DOWNLOAD THE FULL ACTION PLAN: in pdf or text format

Aims
1. To raise awareness of the importance of parks, squares and amenity grassland in the conservation of London's biodiversity.
2. To encourage good conservation practice in parks, squares and amenity grassland across London, working alongside and through existing cultures and traditions.
3. To encourage the enjoyment of wildlife and landscape in parks squares and amenity grassland by all Londoners.

Parks and Squares quote

Parks, squares and other public green spaces are immensely important to city dwellers, in providing an opportunity to spend time out of doors, but near their homes or place of work, in contact with the natural world. This includes both the broader aspects such as landscape, skyline, fresh air and open water, and nature itself as represented by birds, trees, butterflies and wild flowers.

Parks are, by definition, open spaces that are managed primarily for human enjoyment rather than specifically for nature conservation. Nonetheless, in an increasingly urbanised society, where the expansion of the city means that true countryside becomes ever more distant, and what little countryside remains around the urban fringe has often lost much of its wildlife interest, parks increasingly symbolise pockets of countryside in town. Thus they can help to meet the need for the psychological and even spiritual fulfillment which can be gained by contact with nature. For most park users this will fit alongside other benefits such as meeting friends, taking children to a playground, playing sports, exercising the dog, attending social or cultural activities, or simply enjoying a health-giving walk in pleasant surroundings.

However, parks also serve as an ecological resource in their own right. For example, they help to sustain populations of birds such as robin, chaffinch, and great spotted woodpecker in London. Two Priority Species for Action in the UK Biodiversity Action Plan - song thrush and spotted flycatcher - breed in some parks and squares and similar historic gardens. Bats such as pipistrelle and noctule occur in some parks, especially those with a wide expanse of open water. Hedgehogs survive in some parks even close to the city centre.

The range of wildlife in any park depends partly on how it is managed. How far this resource is enjoyed by Londoners depends partly on the efforts of the parks staff and others in promoting the natural interest, and also on issues such as accessibility, i.e. whether people feel safe enough or welcome to explore what is on offer.

This Habitat Action Plan is being developed at a time when increasing concern is being expressed at the state of Britain's public parks, following financial cut backs over many years. In the Urban White Paper 'Our towns and cities' the Government has expressed a commitment to the value of parks in urban communities and the need for improved management, increased funding and new ideas to meet life styles in the 21st century society. It has set up an Urban Green Spaces Task Force to investigate the important issues. The Greater London Authority's Green Spaces Investigative Committee has produced a 'Scrutiny of Green Spaces in London'. The Mayor's Biodiversity Strategy seeks to protect and improve green spaces and wildlife habitat in London and to promote access to nature, especially in parts of London which have least on offer. It is appropriate for this Habitat Action Plan to play its part in ensuring that ecology, nature conservation and opportunities for people to enjoy the natural world are on the agenda for London's parks.

Contact
The Lead for this habitat is the Greater London Authority.
Jan Hewlett
Greater London Authority
Biodiversity Team
4th Floor, City Hall
The Queen’s Walk
London SE1 2AA

Tel: 020 7983 4329
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.london.gov.uk

Download
This is only a summary - download the full audit in pdf or text format

Related documents:

Spelling out Good Practice
The Green Flag Award Scheme
Safer or Greener? Landscaping for Biodiversity and Security (seminar notes)

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