|
|
|
| home | your council |
business | community | education | environment & waste |
leisure & tourism |
roads & transport |
social care |
|
Biodiversity Action Plans
|
Biodiversity Action PlansBiodiversity Action Plans (BAP's) are a way of conserving plants and animals. They
have three important features:
The UK BAPIs the UK Government's response to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)
signed in 1992 . It describes the UK's biological resources and commits a detailed plan for their protection.
It has 391 Species Action Plans, 45 Habitat Action Plans and 162 Local Biodiversity
Action Plans with targeted actions.
This was the first BAP to be produced in Britain and was pioneered by the RSPB and other voluntary organisations. It has had a great deal of influence on government thinking and been outstandingly successful in raising awareness and stimulating action. Many of the habitats and species included in the national plan do not occur in Leicestershire. But several of the habitat action plans in the Leicestershire BAP, such as wet woodland and mesotrophic lakes, are the same as national priority habitats. Regional BAPsThere is no East Midlands BAP, but the East Midlands Biodiversity Forum co-ordinates local BAP's in the region and other initiatives. They have worked closely with regional organisations such as the East Midlands Regional Chamber, to produce biodiversity targets and indicators for the region as a whole. Local BAPsThe Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland BAP, produced in 1998 contains action plans for eighteen priority habitats and also fourteen species action plans all listed below. The emphasis is on protecting habitats which support lots of threatened plants and animals.
The first annual report (1999) listed eighteen major achievements including heathland creation, restoration projects and a survey of mature trees by community groups across Leicestershire and Rutland. It is possible to contribute to the BAP in several ways including:
The
Charnwood Biodiversity Action Plan covers the borough of Charnwood and includes plans for
many of the habitats and species in the county BAP, plus a few of special concern in Charnwood such
as the song thrush and post-industrial land
The National Forest BAP covers the National Forest area, which extends into Derbyshire and Staffordshire. Many of the priority habitats and species are similar to the Leicestershire BAP, but also include further species such as the bluebell. |
|||||
|