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Why moorland is a matter for us all

The Field

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August 2023

At the fourth Moorland Summit, conservationists of all stripes gathered to seek common ground in order to protect our moors and the species that rely on them

- RORY KNIGHT BRUCE

Why moorland is a matter for us all

BENEATH a cloudless azure sky on the Lancashire moorland, not far from an abandoned stone barn, a diurnal short-eared or 'bog' owl is clapping its wings 50 feet above the ground. It is 'listening' for a vole, which is how it hunts: one ear unevenly placed above the other, circling and swooping until it is joined by a mobbing lapwing whose nest and young are hidden among the white grass and heather below. Welcome to nature's avian daily flight for survival.

A curlew in flight: these endangered birds are twice as likely to be found on managed grouse moors than outside of one

This 7,000-acre managed moor provides nature, sanctuary and a food supply for owl and lapwing alike. So, too, it does for curlew and oystercatchers and, as I was to find out over the next 24 hours as a guest of the fourth Moorland Summit, a myriad of other birdlife, insects and fauna. Organised by the well-known wildlife photographer and author Tarquin Millington-Drake, the 20 or so delegates and speakers were drawn from interested parties as varied and diverse as the moorland bird world itself.

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