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Summary

A water vole nibbles on a green leaf from inside a terracotta pipe that sticks out of a lush green riverbank, just above the water.

Water Vole, Ben.Andrew (rspb-images.com)

Vision for a nature-rich Devon

Devon’s rural, urban and coastal landscapes are alive with the sights and sounds of wildlife. Mosaics of high-quality habitats form a network across the county allowing species to flourish and adapt to climate change. These healthy natural systems help store carbon and provide clean water, healthy soils, reduced flooding and abundant pollinators. Wherever we go we’re close to nature, which helps us feel happier and healthier.

Overview of Devon’s wildlife

Devon is one of the largest and most varied counties in England. We have an incredible variety of wildlife habitats due to factors that include our varied geology, soils and landscapes, our mild climate, our coastal location and how we’ve managed this environment over thousands of years.

Our wildlife habitats range from the heather moorlands, bogs and mires on Dartmoor and Exmoor down through river valleys with remnants of ancient woodlands to our two coastlines with scrubby coastal grasslands, cliffs, rocky shores, dunes and estuaries. Between the moors and the coast we have heaths, woodlands, ancient trees, ponds, flower-rich meadows and mosaics of wet mires, species-rich rush pastures and wet woodlands.

Connecting all these habitats is an amazing network of hedge and watercourse corridors. Across the county, our gardens, parks and other green spaces also provide hugely important wildlife habitats and are places where we can all connect with nature every day.

Habitats such as blanket bogs, heaths, ancient woodlands, Culm grasslands, sea cliffs, dunes, estuaries, reefs and sea caves are internationally important. A number of globally threatened species, such as the European Eel and Freshwater Pearl Mussel are found in Devon. Species such as the Lundy Cabbage Flea Beetle and Horrid Ground Weaver Spider are not found anywhere else in the world. Devon is also a stronghold for rare species including Otters, Hazel Dormice and Greater and Lesser Horseshoe Bats.

However, this strategy is not just about rare species. Much of our wildlife has declined over the last century and an important national target is to halt the decline in species abundance by 2030.

Devon’s wildlife and natural processes provide food, clean water and fresh air. Habitats stores carbon and control floods. Native species pollinate our crops. Wildlife brings us joy, calming our minds and lifting our spirits. We can’t live without it.

“Nature is critical national infrastructure. When we destroy it, we increase floods, heat deaths, food insecurity and economic instability. When we restore it, we reduce risk, save lives and strengthen the economy.” Professor Nathalie Seddon, National Emergency Briefing.

Major direct habitat losses as a result of development and other land uses are currently largely controlled through legislation and policy. However, most of Devon’s remaining habitats are small and fragmented and many are in poor condition. Our species populations largely continue to decline in number and distribution.

Devon’s wildlife is threatened by a range of pressures including climate change, intensive farming, invasive species, disease, lighting, pesticides, lack of appropriate management, pollution and continued fragmentation due to development.

What a nature-rich Devon looks like

High Opportunity Areas

Nature recovery is needed everywhere. However the purpose of this strategy is to help prioritise action and to map (as far as is possible) where actions are most needed to achieve a nature-rich Devon. In Devon these mapped areas have been called High Opportunity Areas.

The map below shows Devon’s High Opportunity Areas, the areas of particular opportunity for managing and creating wildlife habitats. This map is illustrative only. Please see the Viewer to see the detailed layers, including opportunity areas for species and wider benefits (flooding, water quality and connecting people and nature).

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Actions needed across Devon

For detailed actions relating to habitat management and creation please see the Habitat and Species pages. Key cross-cutting actions are summarised below.

Supporting actions

Key landscapes for Devon Special Species

The boxes below give a summary of the Devon Special Species that can be found in some key landscapes. These include our Protected Landscapes (National Parks and National Landscapes), Coastal Wildbelt and other areas such as the Teign Valley and Bovey Basin, which support a wealth of Devon Special Species. The lists are not intended to be comprehensive.

Devon Special Species in the Coastal Wildbelts

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