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New fellowship to get to root of the issues

New fellowship to get to root of the issues

The opportunities for woodland creation within one of Scotland’s two national parks will be explored as part of a new fellowship.

The Scottish Government-funded fellowship will independently examine the opportunities and constraints for expanding woodland in Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park in order to meet climate and biodiversity priorities.

Despite a clear emphasis on woodland expansion from the Scottish and UK Governments, and planting opportunities and incentives being on offer within the National Park, uptake of these by land managers has been limited.

Fellow Rob McMorran, from Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC), will hear from land managers within the National Park to find out more about the decisions they make, what their constraints are for woodland creation and provide impartial advice on what can be done in practice to overcome them.

The fellowship will run until April 2021 and provide objective evidence to contribute to the National Park’s recently launched Trees and Woodlands Strategy.

The strategy highlights the value of trees and woodlands in the National Park and outlines how they are to be protected and enhanced over the next 20 years.

While there is above-average woodland coverage (31 per cent) in the National Park, the strategy also sets out a target of 2000 additional hectares of planted or naturally regenerated woodland within the park by 2023, with a focus on native woodland.

This will contribute to achieving the national native woodland creation target of 3,000 to 5,000 hectares per year.

The fellowship is funded by the Scottish Government as part of a partnership between the Scottish Environment, Food Agriculture Research Institutes (SEFARI) – which SRUC is a member of - and Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park.

Dr McMorran said: “The fellowship is an important opportunity to provide objective insights on the barriers of new woodland creation in the park from the land manager perspective.

“Woodland creation has an increasingly important role in relation to climate change mitigation and enhancing biodiversity.

“If woodland expansion is to continue, it is important to understand how this can occur in ways which complement existing land uses and offer diversification opportunities for land managers, to ensure it is seen as a viable and attractive opportunity.”

Simon Jones, Director of Conservation and Visitor Operations at Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park, said: “Developing new native woodland in the National Park will provide great benefits for biodiversity and in the efforts to tackle the global climate emergency.

“It’s therefore absolutely vital that we work with and support land managers to develop woodland creation proposals that help deliver on these key targets.

“This fellowship will provide valuable insight into existing barriers and how we can work together to overcome them.”

For more information please contact Andrew Kelloe, Research and Communications Manager at andrew.kelloe@sefari.scot 

 

Notes to the Editors

SEFARI is a consortium of six globally renowned research institutes. As SEFARI, these institutes deliver the Scottish Government-funded Strategic Research Programme (SRP), which addresses key mid to longer-term challenges for Scotland’s environment, agriculture, land use, food and rural communities.

The project will contribute to the LLTNPA’s National Park Partnership Plan 2018-23 and will advance existing land manager engagement in woodland creation during the implementation of a new Trees & Woodlands Strategy.

In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, all face-to-face research across the Scottish Government, its partners and contractors, including SEFARI and the National Parks, has stopped for the foreseeable future and any engagement will follow­­ Scottish Government guidance.