An Environmental History of Wildlife in England 1650-1950

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sevenTeenTh-CenTury environmenTs: Woodland and WasTe 23

Coppiced woods were and are important and diverse habitats – around
250 species of flowers, sedges and grasses occur mainly or only within them^13



  • but this is largely a consequence of their essential artificiality. Portions of
    a wood were usually felled in turn, on rotation, creating a mosaic of blocks
    of coppice in different stages of regrowth – a most unnatural arrangement.
    Coppicing opens up the floor of the wood to light, yet at the same time leaves
    the ground flora undisturbed, a regime which favours species such as wood
    anemone (Anemone nemorosa).^14 Other species (such as water avens (Geum
    rivale) and pignut (Conopodium majus) are largely restricted to ancient
    woods simply because they cannot survive grazing pressure well: woods
    were the only environments in the early modern world neither intensively
    grazed nor regularly ploughed.^15 In addition, many of these species remained
    in ancient woods because they are slow to colonize new ones, although as
    we shall see the extent of this is often exaggerated in the scientific literature.
    The flower-rich coppices were and are ideal for sustaining a wide range
    of insects, especially butterflies like the pearl-bordered fritillary, the high
    brown fritillary, and the Duke of Burgundy. Indeed, the decline of coppicing
    over the last century or so has been a major factor in the fall in butterfly
    numbers in England.^16
    The abundant supplies of food afforded by such a diverse and continually
    changing environment attracted a wide range of birds and mammals,
    although the former in particular were also directly encouraged by the
    structural diversity afforded by traditional management. Bird species display
    much variation in terms of their preferences for different stages of coppice
    regrowth, and thus the mosaic of fells served to rack up the scale of diversity.
    Finches, buntings and the Sylvia warblers will have been more common in
    young coppice but tits and thrushes probably increased as they matured.
    As the canopy closed after 7–10 years, the number of birds would decline,
    but soon after the compartment would be cut, beginning the whole process
    anew.^17
    Large numbers of birds and mammals were attracted to the margins
    of woods, for as already emphasized ‘edge’ environments are of critical
    importance, animals benefiting from the opportunities to forage for food in
    adjacent fields or pastures, but also enjoying the cover, and further sources
    of food, provided by the wood itself. Garden warbler, blackcap, willow
    warbler and chaffinch are characteristic birds of the woodland edge, together
    with chiffchaff and nightingale in places where the wood has a scrubby
    margin. Hedgehog, the common shrew and other small mammals are also
    at home here. Some species, such as pygmy shrews, are largely restricted
    to the wood edge, and are seldom found in the interior. Conversely, red
    squirrels preferred to live towards the centres of large blocks of woodland,
    while tawny owls are today absent from some 90 per cent of woods smaller
    than 100 hectares, but from only c.18 per cent of those larger than this.^18 In
    terms of birds especially, the interiors of large woods were and are home to

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