Conservation and Ecology (Theme Lead: Dr Angus I. Carpenter)
Ranging from local to national and international scales, the Conservation and Ecology theme engages in multi-disciplinary approaches, utilising methodologies from the natural and/or social sciences, to benefit conservation practices and outcomes. Theme members engage with research activities to provide outcomes that support both an evidence-based and adaptive approach to conservation decisions and management that, ultimately, aim to protect landscapes and biodiversity. The Anthropocene is highlighting many pressures, such as unsustainable natural resource use, causes for biodiversity loss, and climate change, which can require novel, large-scale holistic approaches at one level to local scale, ecosystem reconstruction and reintroduction projects, such as the BOOM project, at the other. The Conservation and Ecology theme membership is made up of highly skilled and experienced people, engaging with research activities across all these different levels to make our world a better place.
Assessing Carbon Stocks in Solway Salt Marshes
Shovi Anjum, Project Officer at the Solway Firth Partnership, has been working in University of Cumbria's laboratories processing her saltmarsh samples. Saltmarshes are dynamic intertidal ecosystems, existing between the marine and terrestrial environments. They are important for coastal defense, as important habitats in themselves and, research has shown, as carbon sinks. Their carbon storage capacity has led to the forthcoming UK Saltmarsh Code, introducing saltmarsh to the voluntary carbon markets.
The Solway Firth Partnership’s ongoing research includes seeking to quantify carbon stocks within the Solway Coast National Landscape’s saltmarshes, one of the largest saltmarsh complexes in Britain. Soil and vegetation samples were collected and are being processed within laboratories at the University of Cumbria's Ambleside Campus. Detailed carbon profiles across marsh zones and depths, provide informative and rigorous benchmarks for land management.
The project demonstrates a successful collaboration between Solway Firth Partnership, landowners, University of Cumbria and UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. The project has been enriched by incorporating landowners’ insights on past landscape changes that allow the connection of historical land use to carbon stocks.
Estuarine & Coastal Science: a focus on North-West England
The Estuarine & Coastal Science Association held a conference at the University of Cumbria's Fusehill Street campus, Carlisle, from the 20th to 22nd May 2024. This was the first time this event had been held in, and focusing upon, the North West region of England. The conference provided an excellent opportunity for discovering the wide range of coastal/estuarine projects in progress around Cumbria and adjacent counties. Attendees and speakers represented over 20 national and regional organisations; such as Manchester, Bangor, Reading and Heriot-Watt universities; the Marine Management Organisation, National Oceanography Centre (NOC), Centre for Ecology and Hydrology and Solway Firth Partnership. The conference was co-organised by Andrew Withers from the NOC and Dr Angus Carpenter, Theme Lead for Conservation & Ecology at University of Cumbria's Centre for National Parks & Protected Areas. |
South Cumbria Pine Marten Recovery Project
The Back On Our Map (BOOM) Project, administered by the University of Cumbria, completed a feasibility study in 2022 for a pine marten translocation to south Cumbria. The results indicate suitable habitat, cross sector support and low risk for a founder population.
A Cumbria Pine Marten Working Group is progressing a translocation project under licence from NatureScot. The working group is supported by the Vincent Wildlife Trust and includes representatives from Forestry England, Cumbria Wildlife Trust, Natural England, University of Cumbria, Graythwaite Estate and the University of Leeds.
The aim of the group is to use translocation methods to expand the regional meta population and recover pine martens in the North West of England to improve their conservation status, support resilient forest ecosystems and benefit local communities.
The project will be implemented over 3 or 4 years with release and post-release monitoring phases using founder animals from donor sites in Scotland.
Image credit: Mic Mayhew, May 2022. Photograph of pine marten at Shieldaig, Wester Ross, Scotland.
BOOM: Transforming lives and landscapes in South Cumbria
Back On Our Map (BOOM)
BOOM is an ambitious four-year, £2 million project which aims to re-engage communities in south Cumbria with their natural environment, by restoring the landscape and reintroducing a suite of locally threatened or extinct native species.
Further information: Please visit the Back On Our Map project webpage or follow the project on Twitter @BoomCumbria or Facebook @BackOnOurMap.
Funder: The National Lottery Heritage Fund
Partners: Led by the University of Cumbria in partnership with the Cumbria Wildlife Trust, Natural England, the Forestry Commission and Morecambe Bay Partnership
Contact: Jo Sayers, BOOM Project Manager; Professor Ian Convery, BOOM Academic Lead.
Professional Forester Degree Apprenticeship Launched
In September 2022, the University of Cumbria (UoC), Ambleside Campus will see the arrival of the first cohort of degree apprentices. The Apprenticeship has been developed in partnership with the Forestry Commission (FC), who will be providing blended learning alongside staff from the National School of Forestry at UoC. This unique programme of study has been validated by the Institute of Chartered Foresters who also had extensive input in its creation, thus, providing a new sector developed and delivered programme. Apprentices will have an intensive 3-year plan of study, which will be delivered at various locations, including Cannock Chase Forest Training Centre and our Carlisle Campus, to maximise their access to appropriate resources. Additional staff have been recruited, both at the UoC and the FC, to assist with the delivery of the programme and we will welcome around 30 apprentices at the beginning of September 2022 with the first cohort coming from the FC, the National Trust and the Woodland Trust. It is anticipated that this number will dramatically expand in Sepember 2023.
Enquiries: Please email Mark Tomlinson
Image: Students visiting a Caledonian Forest. Image credit: Mark Tomlinson
Eco-I North West: supporting a clean and sustainable future for Cumbrian businesses
The UK government has set targets to reduce carbon emissions and be net-zero by 2050 and Cumbria has the ambition to be net-zero by 2037.
Eco-I North West at the University of Cumbria is part of a collaborative £14m research, development and knowledge exchange support project open to small and medium-businesses across England's North West.
Uniting six of the region’s top universities, the programme has a distinctive model for interdisciplinary research, seeking to support carbon-reducing business innovations across Cumbria, Lancashire, Liverpool City Region, Cheshire & Warrington and Greater Manchester.
Delivered through a variety of higher-level degrees, short-term interventions and long-term technical assistance, business projects are not led by specific technologies or areas of research, but instead are driven by business needs and a collaborative approach to problem solving.
In a time of climate and biodiversity crisis, we hope to facilitate transition to a low carbon economy, business resilience, innovation and growth.
Partners: Lancaster University; Liverpool John Moores University; University of Liverpool; Manchester Metropolitan University
Enquiries: Any Cumbrian businesses with potential low carbon development projects should contact Mike Siddall or Laura Giles
Image: Eco-I NW research project with Barker & Bland Ltd calculated massive carbon savings using on-site peat bunds and brash rather than imported materials such as coir logs to restore degraded peatlands.
Image credit: Jack Brennand
Communities for Red Colobus
Communities for Red Colobus (C4RC) is a grant funded project which was developed by Dr Mic Mayhew with national and international partners in 2019 to implement the Red Colobus Action Plan 2021-26 priorities for Endangered Temminck’s red colobus (Piliocolobus badius temminckii, TRC) populations in The Gambia (Linder et al., 2021). TRC is one of 17 species of red colobus which are widely recognized as the most threatened group of primates on the African subcontinent and in need of urgent conservation action. C4RC is supporting local livelihoods and primate conservation through community education, capacity building, primate monitoring and research, patrols and enforcement, sustainable forestry practices and ecotourism initiatives. Activities are implemented by a team of 6 local rangers and a project manager in the Sambel Kunda area of the Central River Region and at Pirang Community Forest in the Western Region.
Partners: Department of Parks and Wildlife Management (The Gambia), Department of Forestry (The Gambia), Partners For Red Colobus, Re:wild, colleagues from the Red Colobus Working Group of the IUCN SSC Primate Specialist Group
Funders: Tusk Trust, Global Challenges Research Fund, Re:wild, Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation, National Geographic, American Society of Primatologists
Enquiries: Dr Mic Mayhew, michael.mayhew@cumbria.ac.uk
PhD researcher evaluating upland blanket peatland restoration
Jack Brennand, Doctoral Researcher
Jack’s PhD is part of the ERDF-funded ECO-I NW project, a low carbon innovation project that supports micro, small, and medium enterprises with research and development. Jack works closely with Barker & Bland Ltd to evaluate blanket peatland restoration in the Cumbrian uplands.
Blanket peat structure and function will be assessed at degraded, restored, and near-natural sites employing 3D X-ray computed tomography (μCT). Additional bulk chemical and field greenhouse gas monitoring datasets will be integrated with μCT to understand the response of carbon dioxide and methane dynamics to blanket peatland restoration. Life-Cycle assessment analysis will also be conducted to quantify the carbon footprint of restoration approaches.
The goal of Jack’s research is to inform practice and policy.
Thesis title: Evaluating upland blanket peatland restoration in Cumbria: structure, function, gaseous exchange, and carbon accounting
Supervisors: Dr Simon Carr (Lead Supervisor), Dr Jane Barker and Dr Helen Manns
Funding: European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) via ECO-I NW with University of Cumbria
Partners: Barker & Bland Ltd.
Project webpage: University of Cumbria - ECO-I NW Collaborative Peatland Restoration Project