Biodiversity Action Plan

Heather in bloom

Complete Biodiversity Action Plan (6.5MB) Adobe pdf document

Annual Report for 2007 / 2008 (3MB) Adobe pdf document

Action Plans

Woodlands

Upland Ashwoods – amongst the finest in Europe

Upland Oak / Birchwoods – at the south-eastern edge of their British range

Wet Woodland – a small resource, valuable for a variety of species

Parkland and Veteran Trees – the iconic old trees forming part of our cultural heritage

Grasslands

Limestone Dales – geological features supporting rich wildlife habitats of high European conservation value

Hay Meadows – dramatically declining across the country

Unimproved Pastures – enclosed fields, carefully managed to support a myriad of wildflowers

Rough Grazing – open grasslands on the moorland edge

Rush Pasture – wet grasslands of great value to breeding wading birds

Lead Rakes – old lead mining sites with a highly specialised flora

Wetlands

River Corridor Habitats – rivers streams and wetlands

Ponds – including the distinctive White Peak dewponds

Moorlands

Limestone Heath – fast disappearing heath in the White Peak

Blanket Bog – the UK represents around 10-15% of the world’s peat bogs

Heather Moorland – one of the most distinctive landscapes of the Peak District

Species

Water Vole – declined across the UK since the industrial revolution

Curlew – soon to be listed as globally near threatened

Lapwing – strongly associated with upland hill farming, but declining alarmingly

Twite – currently of grave conservation concern in England

White-Clawed Crayfish – globally threatened species

Derbyshire Feather-Moss – the entire world population on one small site

Additional publications

Mid-term review

BAP mid-term review

The Peak District BAP was reviewed in 2006/2007

Biodiversity Action Plan Mid-Term Review 2001-2007 (2.9MB) Adobe pdf document

Mid-Term Review Technical Report (410KB) Adobe pdf document

Mid-Term Review Appendices (600KB) Adobe pdf document

Annual report

The Annual Report for 2007/2008 highlights the achievements of the BAP partnership, with a few facts and figures and some case studies illustrating our work. BAP habitats are showing some improvements, and the figures for SSSI condition are encouraging. There is still more work to be done for our BAP species, however, with a notable reduction in the number of lapwings since 2002. Their decline nationally has also been recognised by the inclusion of lapwing on the revised UKBAP priority species list.

Download the report for details of activity in the Peak District BAP area (3MB) Adobe pdf document