We will work with landowners and schools to restore and create new meadows in South Norfolk that will offer vital new homes for wildlife and produce seeds that will be used to make even more meadows in the future.
Since the 1930s it is estimated that the UK has lost a staggering 98.5 per cent of our wildflower meadows. In Norfolk, a county of intensive arable farming, this rate of loss has been particularly heavy, and traditional meadows have effectively disappeared across the county.
Meadows are a vital part of our natural environment. They create a home for a wide variety of wildlife, including butterflies, bees and other pollinating insects and in turn support mammals and creatures right up the food chain.
Meadows also store and remove carbon from the atmosphere, helping in the fight against climate change, and can help reduce the impacts of flooding, provide hay for livestock, and offer beautiful places for people to enjoy time in nature.
The new project will also help support the survival of some of the rare plant species found in the unique habitats of the South Norfolk Claylands, including sulphur clover, dyer’s greenweed and spiny restharrow.