The Guardian view on new forests: a vision born in the Midlands is worth imitating | Editorial
If a tree-planting scheme in western England can match the first national forest, people as well as wildlife will benefit
The benefits for bats were presumably not at the top of the government's list of reasons for announcing the creation of the new western forest. The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, regards rules that protect these nocturnal mammals as a nuisance. Nevertheless, the rare Bechstein's bat, as well as the pine marten and various fungi, are expected to be among species that benefit from the multiyear project, to which central government has so far committed 7.5m.
Like England's only existing national forest, in the Midlands, this one will be broken up across a wide area, featuring grassland, farmland, towns and villages as well as densely planted, closed-canopy woodland. JohnEveritt, who heads the National Forest organisation (which is both a charity and a government arm's length body), describes this type of landscape as forest in the medieval sense with a mosaic of habitats".
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