Woodland Habitat Audit
Download
the complete Audit
Summary
This audit includes all semi-natural
plant communities dominated by trees or shrubs. Although
there are a few intermediate habitats, the dominance of
woody species generally distinguishes woodland and scrub
from grasslands and marshes. Londons better woodlands
have been described before, but this audit can take account
of more recent information on both the woodlands and their
community types, provide borough by borough statistics and
identify the issues that will need to be addressed in action
for Londons woodlands and scrub.
There is no doubt that London
was very largely clothed in woodland before the activities
of man induced the other ancient habitats. Even nowadays,
after millennia of management, the composition of the ground
flora of the older woodlands is derived from this wildwood.
But there have been many losses, and the composition of
woodland canopies more reflects their long history of management,
so that species like hornbeam, sweet chestnut, field maple
and hazel are more abundant than they would be naturally.
Many wet
woodlands have a dense structure, often with fallen trees,
difficult ground conditions and mosquitoes. This makes them
more difficult to enjoy and so less appreciated by the public
than 'bluebell woods'. They are threatened with changes
in the water regime through drainage or flood control work,
succession to drier habitat and toxic water pollutants/
The tradition of pond maintenance to arrest succession to
wet woodland prevents the development of many small wet
woodlands.
There has
been a national drive for woodland planting, manifest in
and around London in the Watling and Thames Chase projects.
The aims of these projects extend far beyond biodiversity
conservation, but they provide an excellent basis for the
development of new woodlands for people to enjoy. There
are also less obvious opportunities, such as allowing wetlands
to develop into wet woodland through natural succession,
which would be appropriate in disused mineral workings.
Tree planting can, however, cause harm to nature conservaton,
as trees shade out other valuable plant communities in grassland,
heath, wasteland or marsh. It is vital therefore that new
woodland planting is undertaken only after survey of the
existing plant communitiy confirms that it is of no species
value for nature conservation.
Download
the full Audit - the above is only a summary.
Woodland
Habitat Action Plan
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