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Important

Warning: there is an extreme risk of wildfire across Scotland from Friday 11 July to Monday 14 July. Please follow Scottish Outdoor Access Code guidance and call 999 if you see a wildfire. 

About a third of the land we manage is open ground, providing a diverse range of habitats for a huge number of species.

Much of this open ground exists because it is too high or too wet to plant. In other cases we're deliberately leaving areas of open ground in newly created forests to conserve important habitats.

We’re also working to restore some of our rarest open habitats – including lowland raised bog and blanket bogs. We carry out conservation management of wildflower meadows and coastal sand dunes.

In some places, we’ve even introduced conservation grazing to enhance biodiversity. Grazing is needed to preserve grasslands as early stage successional habitats, supporting many different species of plants and insects.

Conservation stories

Highland cowConservation grazing

Sometimes, grass-eating animals can be of huge benefit to the success of habitat improvement programmes.

Conservation grazing

 

Wildflower meadowCoronation meadows

In an effort to reverse the loss of wildflower meadows, each county in Britain was asked to identify one locally. We're privileged to manage two!

Coronation meadows