Two Falkirk projects to share £317,000 Biodiversity Challenge Fund grant

Two nature projects in Falkirk have been awarded a share of a £317,000 grant to create high quality urban green spaces.

The funding, which comes from a Biodiversity Challenge Fund set up by Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH), will go to The Froglife Trust and Buglife.

The Froglife Trust has received £160,000 to help restore and create homes for pond-loving wildlife at 12 sites across the town, while Buglife’s Central Scotland B-Lines project will use its £157,000 grant to create a coast-to-coast network of special places for nature, with Falkirk at its heart.

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Both projects include valuable training opportunities for local conservation volunteers.

Amphibians and reptiles are the main focus of Come Forth for Wildlife, a project run by The Froglife Trust, but a wide range of other animals will also benefit from the work, including bats, small mammals, birds and aquatic insects.

Fourteen new ponds will be created to boost aquatic biodiversity as well as 22 new scrapes — shallow depressions which seasonally hold water containing invertebrates, important food for foraging wader birds and their chicks.

Amphibians will also benefit from improved species-rich grasslands near the ponds and wildlife corridors will be enhanced in four neighbourhoods in Falkirk.

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Training in species identification, surveying and habitat management will be provided for 96 volunteers.

The Central Scotland B-Lines initiative is set to create 100 hectares of wildflower habitat across 50 urban sites, connecting East Dunbartonshire, South Lanarkshire, Falkirk and Edinburgh, helping pollinators to move freely through towns and cities.

Local community groups will take on ownership of each site.

The project includes training in areas such as managing and monitoring of local sites and ways of increasing habitat connectivity across the Central Belt.

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Suzanne Burgess, Buglife’s Scotland manager, said: “We’re delighted that our ground-breaking, landscape-scale project has received this funding from SNH.

“We’re now really looking forward to working with our partners, fantastic volunteers and local communities in Falkirk and the other project areas to try and halt the decline in Scotland’s vital pollinating insects.”

The projects are two of 14 successful applicants across Scotland to share the £1.8 million Biodiversity Challenge Fund over a two-year period.

The funding will support large-scale projects that aim to deliver rapid change on the ground to help at-risk habitats and species, including mammals and birds, connect existing nature reserves and tackle non-native invasive species.

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Mairi Gougeon, Minister for Rural Affairs and the Natural Environment, said: “I am delighted that, through the Biodiversity Challenge Fund, the Scottish Government and SNH can support these fantastic projects across the country to safeguard some of our most vulnerable species and habitats, and protect them from invasive species.

“Their success will play a crucial role in our efforts to improve nature and help Scotland meet its international biodiversity commitments.”

Francesca Osowska, SNH Chief Executive,said: “Climate change is one of the key drivers of nature loss but it’s not too late to act.

“In fact, improving nature is also one of the solutions to the climate emergency.

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“There are five areas we need to focus on to improve biodiversity — restoring our habitats, changing our use of the land and sea, reducing pollution and climate change and tackling invasive non-native species.

“These projects will improve nature across Scotland for all our benefit.

“We know we have a big task before us but we have been working for years with our partners to meet international nature targets. We are ready to deliver the transformational change needed to bring a nature-rich future for Scotland.”