Meathop Moss

Meathop Moss is a raised bog located north of Meathop in Cumbria, England. Protected as a nature reserve by the Cumbria Wildlife Trust, Meathop Moss is notable for its insect life.[1] In 1965 it was designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest under the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949. Along with two other raised bogs near the Kent estuary, it has been included in the Witherslack Mosses Special Area of Conservation which was designated in 2005.

Meathop Moss
IUCN category V (protected landscape/seascape)
The photo is taken outside the nature reserve looking towards the protected area
LocationCumbria, England
Coordinates54°13′39″N 2°51′29″W
Area82 ha

Etymology

Meathop is a locality near the village of Lindale. Moss is a dialect word meaning bog.

History

The bog developed above a shingle beach after the last glaciation.[2]

Charles Rothschild and the "Rothschild List"

The site was identified by the entomologist Charles Rothschild (1877–1923) as being of ecological importance. He was particularly interested in the site as the habitat of the large heath butterfly and the silver-studded blue. This was to lead to the creation of the nature reserve in 1919.[3] Other than the prevention of the over-collection of butterflies, the reserve did not have a management plan. According to an article in Cumbrian Wildlife, the magazine of the Cumbria Wildlife Trust, the creation of the reserve was not driven by conservation in the modern sense, it was an example of rich collectors protecting their collecting sites from the riff-raff.[4] However a more positive assessment could be made of the overall achievement of Rothschild in relation to conservation.

In 1899 Rothschild (at the age of 22) bought Wicken Fen and presented it to the National Trust: it was arguably Britain's first nature reserve.[5] He organized surveys of other sites deserving protection and a "Rothschild list" of 284 sites in Britain and Ireland, including Meathop Moss, was drawn up. It was published in 1915 by the Society for the Promotion of Nature Reserves (the forerunner of The Wildlife Trusts).[6] In the century after the surveys took place many of these habitats became degraded.[7] Meathop Moss received more protection than most, being leased by the society as a nature reserve.[8]

SSSI

In 1965 it was designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest.

Cumbria Wildlife Trust

The Cumbria Wildlife Trust, which was created in the 1960s as the Lake District Naturalists' Trust, took on the reserve. However, the Trust did not purchase the reserve until 1998. It was helped by the Heritage Lottery Fund.

gollark: In what way?
gollark: I also apparently don't have the disconnect function down yet.
gollark: Probably not worth setting up yet.
gollark: Well, each guild has a "phone" "number" generated from a hash of its ID, which can then be used by other people to "call" it. When you "call" it, the people there are asked to take the call. If they accept, it adds it to the "calls" database, and currently does nothing.
gollark: Anyone with "manage channels".

References

  1. "Meathop Moss" (PDF). English Nature. Retrieved 14 August 2016.
  2. Edmondson, J (11 July 2014). "Splendid walk around Lindale, Halecat and Meathop". Westmorland Gazette. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  3. Dickinson. "Meathop Moss Nature Reserve". Westmorland Gazette.
  4. Harpley, David (May 2019). "Extinction". Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  5. This claim for Wicken Fen is make on its website www.wicken.org.uk. Other contenders include Walton Hall, West Yorkshire.
  6. Moss, S (2012). "The Rothschild Reserves 100 years on". The Wildlife Trusts. Retrieved 2019-05-20.
  7. Rothschild, Miriam and Marren, Peter (1997) Rothschild's Reserves: time & fragile nature. London: Harley (ISBN 0-946589-62-3)
  8. "Meathop Moss". Retrieved 14 January 2016.
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