Summary
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, 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.
Major habitat losses as a result of development and other land uses have now largely been controlled through legislation and policy. However, most of our remaining habitats are small and fragmented and their value is threatened by a range of pressures including invasive species, disease, lighting, pesticides, lack of appropriate management, pollution, climate change and continued fragmentation due to development.
Map showing all High Opportunity Areas
The map below shows areas that have been mapped as High Opportunity Areas for wildlife habitats in the LNRS. Note however that not all actions (such as hedgerow management) can be mapped and that all actions in the LNRS are equally important. These, and other layers, are shown on the Viewer.

Twelve headline priorities

Upland mosaics of bogs, heath, mire bounce with bog-mosses which soak up carbon and support rare flies and spiders. The moors are full of the sounds of Dunlin, Snipe and Whinchats,
Devon Special Species: Dunlin, Curlew, Snipe, Dartmoor Bog Spiders, Bog Hoverfly.
See the Heaths, bogs and mires habitats page for more information. High Opportunity Areas are shown on the viewer. See a snippet of the layers below.

© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Temperate rainforest and ancient woodlands are rich with mosses, ferns and lichens. Veteran trees support rare invertebrates and provide nesting sites for Lesser Spotted Woodpeckers. and roosts for Bechstein’s Bats.
Example Devon Special Species: Pied Flycatchers, Lesser Spotted Woodpecker, Blue Ground Beetle, upland rainforest snails, Bechstein’s Bat, Barbastelle Bat, lichens.
See the Broadleaved woodland, Conifer plantation and Wood pasture pages for more information. High Opportunity Areas are shown on the viewer. See a snippet of the layers below.

© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Our purple and yellow lowland heaths echo with clapping Nightjars and calling Cuckoos. Adders bask on open ground and Narrow-Headed Ants build nests among the heather.
Examples of Devon Special Species include Whinchat, Cuckoo, Dartford Warbler, Pearl-bordered Fritillary.
See the Heaths, bogs and mires habitats page for more information. High Opportunity Areas are shown on the viewer. See a snippet of the layers below.

© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Mire, wet heath, wet woodland and flower-rich wet meadows form extensive mosaics across Devon’s wet, acid lowland soils. Marsh Fritillaries, sundews, Lesser Butterfly-orchids and dragonflies abound. Carbon and water are stored.
Example Devon Special Species: Marsh Fritillary, Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary, Narrow-bordered Bee Hawk-moth, Southern Damselfly, Devon Globetail Hoverfly, Grasshopper Warbler, Willow Tit.

See the Heaths, bogs and mires habitats page for more information. High Opportunity Areas are shown on the viewer. See a snippet of the layers below.
© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Flower-rich grasslands are common across Devon’s rural, urban and coastal areas. They are full of colour and structure and buzz with insects. Bats and birds feed overhead and Harvest Mice nest in tussocks.
Example Devon Special Species: Harvest Mouse, Greater and Lesser Horseshoe Bats, House Martin, Skylark, Yellowhammer and other farmland birds, Green-winged Orchid, Greater Butterfly Orchid.
See the Wildlife-rich grasslands page for more information. High Opportunity Areas are shown on the viewer. See a snippet of the layers below.

© Crown copyright and database rights 202

Trees are an integral part of our towns, villages and farmed landscapes providing benefits such as wildlife habitat, shade, carbon storage, beauty and food. Trees are allowed to grow old and veteran and ancient trees full of dead and decaying wood are celebrated.
© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Our cities, towns and villages are insect-rich rich networks of flowers, trees, orchards, dead wood, scrub, ponds and compost heaps. Bats roost in our buildings, House Sparrows chatter in hedges and parties of Swifts screech overhead.
Examples of Devon Special Species include: hedgehogs, toad, Serotine Bats, Starling, Swift, House Sparrow, House Martin, Spotted Flycatcher.
The map below shows the simple 500m zones mapped around community centres and non-private schools to show where accessible wildlife could be beneficial to communities.

© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156
© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Farmland has healthy soils, bushy hedges with thriving Dormice and Hedgehogs, broad flower-rich field margins, trees and ponds. Yellowhammers, Barn owls, Kestrels and Red Kites are common.
Examples of Devon Special Species: Arable plants, Skylarks, Cirl Buntings, Yellowhammers and other farmland birds. Dormice, Harvest Mice, Brown Hairstreak Butterfly, Lesser Horseshoe Bats.
See the arable and improved grassland, hedges and relevant species pages for more details, including farmland birds.
The example map below shows LNRS Species Opportunity Areas for arable plants, Greater Horseshoe Bats and Cirl Buntings.

© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156
© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Clean rivers and streams provide the wildlife-rich veins of Devon. full of leaping Atlantic Salmon, Eels, Water Voles and Otters. Beavers create new wetlands helping to store water and reduce flooding.
Example Devon Special Species: Otter, beaver, Water Vole, Atlantic Salmon, eels, Lesser Horseshoe Bats, Freshwater Pearl Mussel, native crayfish, aquatic lichens, mosses.
See the Watercourse corridors page for more information. High Opportunity Areas are shown on the viewer. See a snippet of the layers below.

© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

The cliffs, estuaries, marshes, dunes and coastal grasslands of our Coastal Wildbelt provide a continual mosaic of wildlife habitats. Choughs and Sea Eagles have returned and rare bees, spiders and plants are no longer threatened.
Devon Special Species include seahorses, oysters, Puffins, the Celtic Sea Slug, Grey Seal, Wood White Butterfly, Oil Beetles and the Moon Spider (the list is extensive).
See the Coastal Wildbelt page for more information. High Opportunity Areas are shown on the viewer. See a snippet of the layers below.

© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Dark skies…….
© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156

Microhabitats – dead and decaying wood, dung, patches of bare ground
© Crown copyright and database rights 2025 OS AC0000811156
Six cross-cutting actions
For actions relating to habitat management and creation please see the Habitat and Species pages.

Reduce and target the use of pesticides
Pesticides can harm non-target species in lots of ways. They reduce insect populations which are a critical food source for other wildlife such as bats, birds and small mammals. They also accumulate in bodies of organisms and have severe impacts on predators at the top of the food chain (birds of prey and mammals).
Actions: Avoid widespread use of pesticides and adopt an Integrated Pest Management approach to control problem species. This involves:
- monitoring the problem species (including plants and animals)
- setting tolerance targets
- exploring the use of cultural controls (e.g. land management, cutting, ploughing, livestock movement regimes, grazing)
- encouraging natural pest enemies such as predatory soil mites (through maintaining healthy soils)
- biological control such as introducing native nematodes to control slugs rather than using slug pellets
- targeted actions such as hand/mechanical weeding or, as a last resort, targeted applications of chemicals.

Control invasive species
Approximately 10-15% of non-native species are considered invasive and harm the environment, the economy and our health. Examples in Devon include Squirrels, American Signal Crayfish, American Mink and Japanese Knotweed. Some species such the Yellow-legged Asian Hornet aren’t yet established in the county but are a serious threat.
Actions: Control invasive and non-native species and prevent the establishment of new ones.
See the Invasive non-native species page for more details.

Reduce pollution
Human pressures from human waste, roads, agriculture (topsoil, fertilisers, pesticides, manure, antibiotics) and even dog flea treatments are continuing to pollute our freshwaters and intertidal areas.
Action: Reduce all sources of water pollution.
See Watercourse corridors for more details and links.

Reduce light pollution
Light pollution can have serious impacts on wildlife including disturbing natural cycles and creating barriers in the landscape for light sensitive species such as bats.
Actions: Reduce light pollution wherever possible, particularly avoiding light spill onto habitats used by light sensitive species such as bats. Use warm amber lighting.
See Devon Local Nature Partnership Dark Skies pages for more details and useful links.

Reduce recreational disturbance
Disturbance to wildlife from recreational activities is a significant issue across most habitats. This includes disturbance to rare lichens and plants, to ground nesting birds on our heaths and to wintering birds on our estuaries.
Recreational activities can also lead to compaction of soils which in turn impacts on the habitats that they support.
Action: Reduce disturbance to wildlife including by avoiding sensitive wildlife areas and controlling dogs.
See habitats and species pages for more details including Estuarine birds and Intertidal Mammals

Reduce litter
Keep Britain Tidy estimates that 2 million pieces of rubbish are dropped daily in the UK — all of which is avoidable if we use bins and secure our rubbish to prevent it escaping. Littering from vehicles is especially harmful, killing over 3 million small animals each year when they become trapped in bottles and cans along roadsides and in hedges.
Dog poo is another critical but overlooked threat. Containing pathogens and insecticides from food and flea or worming treatments, dog poo is toxic to wildlife and should always be bagged and binned.
Plastics (such as bags, bottle caps and packaging materials) and other litter and waste also cause serious harm in the marine environment. Microplastics can cause a range of health problems in seals and other wildlife including intestinal injuries and blockages.
Community campaigns, such as Earth Action North Devon, are working to reduce plastic pollution and raise awareness about its environmental impacts.
Actions:
- Always bin litter and litter pick, by yourself or with other and take part in events such as Beach Cleans and the Great British Spring Clean.
- Find out how to get involved in litter picking in Devon on the Clean Devon website or check out the Community litter pick pack from Devon County Council. Great resources for how to avoid creating litter and ‘Reduce, Reuse and Recycle’ in homes, shops, gardens and schools, can also be found on the Recycle Devon website.
- Report full litter bins, problems with litter, or fly tipping on public land to local authorities. Litter attracts more litter.
- Bag and bin dog poo
- Check who you pay to take your rubbish away. We are legally accountable for our rubbish, even if someone else fly-tips it. Always:
- Avoid social media adverts, and paying cash.
- Check that the person taking your rubbish is licenced to do so via the GOV.UK Public Registers.
- Ask and record where your rubbish is being taken.
- Ask for a receipt to include contact details and vehicle registration.verify who you hire to remove your rubbish, and make sure they dispose of it through lawful and responsible methods.
Devon Special Species – key landscapes
The boxes below give a summary of which Devon Special Species are found across Devon Protected Landscapes and other landscapes such as the Teign Valley and Bovey Basin which support a significant number of Devon Special Species.
Note that this page need to be updated at the end of the consultation process and capitals added for names

Widespread species
Devon Special Species found across Devon in suitable habitat.
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
- Mammals: Otter, Hedgehog, Hazel Dormouse, Harvest Mouse, Barbastelle bat, Serotine bat, Lesser Horseshoe Bat, Grey seal
- Birds: Farmland birds (other than Cirl Bunting), Birds of towns and villages
- Fish: Migratory fish (other than allis shad)
- Reptiles and amphibians: Toad, Great Crested Newt, Adder
- Moths and butterflies: Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary, Brown Hairstreak butterfly
- Spiny Cockle
- Fungi and lichens: Fungi and lichens of veteran trees, woodlands and ancient grasslands

Dartmoor National Park and the SW Dartmoor Downs
Habitats: Bogs, valley mires, heaths, acid grasslands, species-rich rush pastures, Ancient woodlands and wood pasture, wildlife-rich grasslands.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
- Mammals: *beaver, *water vole, *greater horseshoe bat, *grey long-eared bat, pine martens
- Birds: Heath, moor and rough grassland birds (*dunlin, *curlew, *snipe, *whinchat, cuckoo, tree pipit, Dartford warbler, kestrel etc), woody birds (*pied flycatcher, *willow tit, lesser spotted woodpecker, *wood warbler, lesser redpoll, nightjar). Cirl buntings
- Moths and butterflies: *Marsh fritillary, *narrow-bordered bee hawk-moth, *pearl-bordered fritillary, *high brown fritillary, *heath fritillary, moths of Dartmoor broadleaved woods
- Bees, ants and wasps: Billberry bumblebee
- True flies: *Bog hoverfly, valley mire flies, *Devon globetail hoverfly , wet woodland flies
- Beetles: dung beetles, blue ground beetle
- Dragonflies: southern damselfly, scarce blue-tailed damselfly
- Spiders and harvestmen: Dartmoor bog spiders
- Molluscs: Upland rainforest snails
- Crustacean: fairy shrimp
- Flowering plants and ferns: Great sundew, lesser butterfly orchid, greater butterfly orchid, frog orchid, wood bitter vetch, Deptford pink, Forked spleenwort, Toadflax-leaved St John’s wort, heath lobelia. South West Dartmoor Down Specialist plants (chamomile, Cornish eyebright, marsh clubmoss),
- Lichens: Dartmoor granite lichens, upland rainforest lichens, deadwood lichens, veteran tree lichens, wet woodland lichens, lichens of mines and quarries
- Bryophytes: Many-leaved pocket moss

Exmoor National Park
Habitats: Bogs, valley mires, heaths, species-rich rush pastures, Ancient woodlands and wood pastures, maritime cliff and slope, rocky shore.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *beaver, *grey long-eared.
Birds: Heath, moor and rough grassland birds (snipe, *whinchat, lesser redpoll, tree pipit, Dartford warbler, grasshopper warbler, kestrel,), woody birds (*pied flycatcher, *willow tit, *wood warbler, lesser redpoll), *cliff nesting sea birds.
Moths and butterflies: *high brown fritillary
Bees, ants and wasps: Billberry bumblebee
Beetles: Six-spotted longhorn beetle
Flowering plants and ferns: Rare whitebeams
Lichens: Upland rainforest lichens, deadwood lichens, veteran tree lichens, wet woodland lichens
Bryophytes: Dumortier’s liverwort (Watersmeet SSSI)
See Morte Point to Somerset Coastal Wildbelt

North Devon Protected Landscape
Habitats: Maritime cliff and slope, rocky shore, sand dunes and other coastal habitats, Culm mosaic, Ancient woodlands.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: Otter, *beaver catchment, *greater horseshoe bat, barbastelle, serotine, lesser horseshoe,
Birds: Farmland birds including cirl buntings.
Reptiles & amphibians: Great crested newt, toad
Moths and butterflies: Small pearl-bordered fritillary
Bees, ants and wasps: Brown-banded carder bumblebee, moss carder bumblebee
See Cornwall to Morte Point Coastal Wildbelt for coastal species.

North Devon Biosphere
Habitats: Maritime cliff and slope, rocky shore, sand dunes and other coastal habitats. Culm mosaic (species rich rush-pasture, wet heath, wet woodland).
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *beaver catchment, *water voles, *greater horseshoe bat
Birds: Heath, moor and rough grassland birds (snipe, *whinchat, lesser redpoll, tree pipit, grasshopper warbler, Dartford warbler, kestrel,), cirl buntings, woody birds (*pied flycatcher, *willow tit, *wood warbler, lesser redpoll), *cliff nesting sea birds.
Moths and butterflies: *high brown fritillary, *Marsh fritillary, *narrow-bordered bee hawk-moth, *wood white
Bees, ants and wasps: Brown-banded carder bumblebee, moss carder bumblebee, billberry bumblebee
True flies: wet woodland flies, *Devon globetail hoverfly, Leucophora sponsa (Halsdon)
Crustaceans: Fairy shrimp
Flowering plants: Lesser butterfly orchid, Rare whitebeams incl. Devon whitebeam
Lichens: Upland rainforest lichens, quarry lichens (Meeth)
Bryophytes: Dumortier’s liverwort (Watersmeet SSSI)
See Cornwall to Morte Point and Morte Point to Somerset Coastal Wildbelt for coastal species.

Teign Valley and Haldon
Habitats: Heath, Species-rich rush pastures, rocky gorge, Ancient woodlands, arable.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *beaver, *water vole, *greater horseshoe bat, *grey long-eared
Birds: cirl buntings, woody birds (*pied flycatcher, *wood warbler), nightjars, Dartford warbler
Moths and butterflies: *pearl-bordered fritillary, *high brown fritillary, moths of Dartmoor broadleaved woods
Spiders and harvestmen: Teign Gorge rock spiders
Molluscs: Upland rainforest snails
Flowering plants and ferns: lesser butterfly orchid, greater butterfly orchid, Forked spleenwort, Toadflax-leaved St John’s wort, arable plants (narrow-fruited corn salad)

Bovey Basin
Habitats: Heathland.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *greater horseshoe bat, *grey long-eared, Bechstein’s
Birds: cirl buntings, woodlark
Reptiles & amphibians: great crested newt
Moths and butterflies: *pearl-bordered fritillary, *high brown fritillary, heathland moths
Bees, wasps, ants: Heath potter wasp, narrow headed ant.
Dragonflies: southern damselfly

South Devon Protected Landscape
Habitats: Coastal habitats, watercourses, arable.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *water vole, *greater horseshoe bat, *grey long-eared
Birds: cirl buntings
Reptiles & amphibians: Great crested newt
Flowering plants: arable plants
See Torbay to Start Point, Start Point to Bolt Tail and Bolt Tail to Plymouth Coastal Wildbelts.

Plymouth
Habitats: Coastal habitats, calcareous grasslands, green spaces and quarries.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *greater horseshoe bat, *grey long-eared, beaver catchment
Spiders: Plymouth arachnids – horrid ground weaver and hedgehog harvestman.
Flowering plants: field eyngo, Plymouth pear, Deptford pink
See Plymouth Coastal Wildbelt

Tamar Valley Protected Landscape
Habitats: Orchards. Mines. Small area of heath/acid grassland.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *greater horseshoe bat sustenance zone, *beaver catchments
Reptiles & amphibians: Great crested newt
Moths and butterflies: *pearl-bordered fritillary, *high brown fritillary
Flowering plants: Possibly SW Dartmoor Down Specialist plants (chamomile, Cornish eyebright, marsh clubmoss)
Lichens: lichens of mines and quarries

East Devon Protected Landscape
Habitats: Heaths, coastal habitats, lowland acid grassland, calcareous grassland.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *greater horseshoe bat, *grey long-eared, *Bechstein’s
Birds: cirl buntings, woodlark, willow tits, tree pipit, nightjar, lesser redpoll
Moths and butterflies: *wood white butterfly, heathland moths
Bees, wasps, ants: Heath potter wasp
Dragonflies: southern damselfly
Flowering plants: Heath Lobelia
See Dorset to Sidmouth Coastal Wildbelt and Sidmouth to Torbay Coastal Wildbelt.

Blackdown Hills Protected Landscape
Habitats: Mosaic of species rich rush-pasture, wet heath, wet woodland. Lowland acid grassland, heath.
Devon Special Species:
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *beaver catchment, *water voles, *greater horseshoe bat, *grey long-eared bat, *Bechstein’s bat
Birds: *Pied Flycatchers, *willow tit
Moths and butterflies: *Marsh fritillary,
Flies: wet woodland flies, valley mire flies
Dragonflies: Southern damselflies (re-introduction failed)
Flowering plants: Lesser butterfly orchid, Great Sundew
Lichens: wet woodland lichens
Devon Special Species in the Coastal Wildbelts

Dorset to Sidmouth
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *Greater horseshoe bat, * *Bechstein’s bat, *grey long-eared bat
Bees: broad-faced burrow bee, buff-banded mining bee
Flies: Spanish snout cranefly, Least cigar-gall fly, Cryptonevra consilimis and the east coast undercliffs fly group
Moths: White spot moth, Devonshire wainscot, Morris’ wainscot, everlasting pea blister moth, wood white and the east coast moth group.
Beetles and crickets: Cliff tiger beetle, scaly cricket
Crustacean: fairy shrimp
Dragonflies: Norfolk hawker (Seaton marshes)
Flowering plants: Nottingham catchfly, early gentian, white horehound
Lichens and bryophytes: Maritime lichens, Solm’s screwmoss

Sidmouth to Torbay
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *Greater horseshoe bat, * *Bechstein’s bat, *grey long-eared bat
Birds: Cliff nesting seabirds (Sandy Park), cirl buntings
Flies: Variable meadow fly?
Moths: Devonshire wainscot, everlasting pea blister moth and the coastal moth group
Flowering plants: Bithynian vetch (Exmouth and Sandy Park)

Torbay
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Birds: Cliff nesting seabirds, *cirl buntings
Moths: Torbay limestone moths
Beetles: Roundhead roughneck rove beetle
Moths: Goldilocks case bearer, white-headed detritus and the limestone moth group, Devonshire wainscot, beautiful gothic and the coastal moth group.
Pants: Torbay limestone specialists plants – goldilocks aster, small restharrow, honewort, small hare’s ear, white rock-rose. Whitebeams
Maritime lichens
Bryophytes: Rabbit moss, Levier’s beardless-moss
Fungi

Brixham to Start Point
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Birds: *cirl buntings
Bees:
Flies: variable meadow fly
Beetles: lizard weevils
Moths: Devonshire wainscot, beautiful gothic and other coastal group moths.
False flat-backed millipede
Dragonflies: Norfolk hawker (Slapton)
Plants: rare arable plants, strapwort (Slapton)
Maritime lichens

Start Point to Bolt Tail
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Birds: cirl buntings
Bees: Six-banded nomad bee and long-horned bee
Flies: Devon red-legged robberfly , variable meadow fly
Spiders: Moon spider and other Prawle cliff spiders
Beetles: Oil beetles, lizard weevils
Moths: Devonshire wainscot, beautiful gothic and other coastal group moths.
Plants: rare arable plants, slender bird’s foot trefoil

Bolt Tail to Plymouth
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Birds: cirl buntings
Beetles: lizard weevils
Flies: variable meadow fly
Moths: Devonshire wainscot, beautiful gothic and moths in the coast group.
Flowering plants: Shoredock, rare arable plants, slender bird’s foot trefoil, dwarf spikerush (Avon estuary)
Bryophytes of south Devon wooded creeks – awl-leaved ditrichum, Turner’s threadwort

Plymouth
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Fish: Allis shad
Flowering plants: triangular clubrush
Bryophytes of south Devon wooded creeks

Cornwall to Morte Point
*= Species Opportunity Area mapped on the Viewer.
Mammals: *Greater horseshoe bat
Birds: *cirl buntings
Bees: Brown-banded carder bumblebee and the moss carder bumblebee.
Flies: North Devon sand dune flies group.
Beetles: Lizard weevil, click beetle
Moths: Devonshire wainscot, scarce black neck and other coastal moths. Sand dune moth group.
Spiders: Yellow-striped bear spider
Molluscs: sand bowl snail
Flowering plants: sand dune plants
Lichens: southern oceanic and maritime lichens
Bryophytes: cordate beardmoss

Morte Point to Somerset
Birds: Cliff nesting seabirds
Moths: Devonshire wainscot, scarce blackneck and moths in the coast group.
Molluscs: Celtic sea slug
Plants: whitebeams
Lichens: Maritime lichens

Lundy
Birds: Cliff nesting seabirds
Beetles: Lundy cabbage beetles
Plants: Lundy cabbage
Lichens: Maritime lichens
