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Urban meadow, Dow Corning Nature Reserve (c) Emily Shaw Vale Nature Partnership

Trefol

Urban meadow, The Grange Farm (c) Lauren Aldridge.jpeg

Trefol, amdrefol ac ôl-ddiwydiannol 

Our ‘urban’ green spaces include parks and woodlands, rivers, road verges, railway lines, old industrial ‘brownfield’ sites, gardens, allotments and even buildings. These are important ‘oases’ for wildlife in areas with little other nature value. Hedgehogs, birds and pollinating insects rely on our gardens for food, while wildflowers and small mammals thrive along our roads and railways - House Sparrows, Swifts, Swallows and bats live life in boxes we put up on trees and buildings. During the recent lockdowns many have come to value their local green spaces as a place to enjoy nature and recharge.

Urban meadow, Dow Corning Nature Reserve (c) Emily Shaw Vale Nature Partnership

Camau Gweithredu

Improved management of grasslands
Measures to reduce light pollution in the Vale
Promote best-practice hedgerow management in urban areas
Increased awareness of the importance of brownfield habitat for wildlife
Raising awareness
Greening the grey and the green
Encourage measures for invertebrates in development mitigation and enhancement
Increased awareness of impacts of hives on wild pollinators and plants

Rhywogaeth

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