BioBlitz in the New Forest National Park
The New Forest National Park BioBlitz is a 24 hour race against time to record as much wildlife as we can in the New Forest. Come and join us as we search in woods, streams, along the coast and on wildlife rich heathlands.
The 2012 Bioblitz is taking place on Friday 25 and Saturday 26 May. This year we will be at the New Forest Reptile Centre, as well as Lepe Country Park for the Shoresearch. It promises to be very rich in terms of habitat, so we are hoping for our biggest tally of species yet.
For details on what is happening where please go to our events pages.
Weird and wonderful wildlife is waiting to be discovered in the New Forest National Park.
Over half of the unique landscape is internationally important for wildlife - a higher proportion than in any other English National Park.
Now a raft of experts will be available to help nature enthusiasts of all ages discover its secrets with the New Forest Bioblitz – a series of free events over 24 hours to record as much wildlife as possible.
The New Forest is a unique mosaic of habitats which combine to make one of the best places for wildlife in Britain. Much of the landscape is lowland heath – a habitat which is rarer than rainforest - and it also contains the greatest concentration of ‘veteran’ trees in western Europe. The National Park is home to 90 out of the remaining 120 extremely rare boggy valley mires left in Europe which are vital for insects such as dragonflies and breeding wading birds.
Among the rarities which can be found in the New Forest are the nail fungus which grows on pony dung; the New Forest Cicada – the UK’s only cicada – found in the pasture woodlands; the UK’s largest breeding population of the rare Dartford warbler; the extremely rare smooth snake; and the New Forest is the most important place in Britain for the rare Southern Damselfly with 30 colonies.
Jim Mitchell, Interpretation Officer at The New Forest National Park Authority, said: ‘The Forest's rich variety of habitats has been created by a unique grazing system of ponies, donkeys, cattle and pigs stretching back a thousand years. There really is no other place quite like it.
‘People head off to Africa on safari to experience glorious wildlife and landscapes. We have it here in the New Forest in abundance, but just on a miniature scale. The trick is knowing how and where to look for it.’
The National Park Authority is inviting people to join in its annual Bioblitz on May 25 and 26 which attracts some of the top wildlife experts in the region and beyond. Events are free (although some must be booked) and include a seashore safari, dawn chorus experience, moth and bat walk.
Jim said: ‘Having the experts with us to share their passion and expertise really brings the wildlife and the secrets of the New Forest alive. We might even find some of the rarities which the New Forest is renowned for. An added incentive is that this year we are part of the Cultural Olympiad event called ‘Meet the Species’. Our results are going towards the aim of finding over 2,012 different species- it would be great to have some New Forest specialities in there.’
New Forest Wildlife Facts
- The New Forest is the only place in Britain where the wild gladiolus grows
- Thirteen of the 17 native species of bats in Britain have been recorded in the New Forest
- Sand lizards were extinct in the New Forest in 1970, but they were successfully re-introduced in 1998
- Insect-eating plants such as the sundew and butterwort are common in the New Forest
- All three species of British newt are found in the New Forest: smooth, palmate and great-crested
- The silver-studded blue butterfly is a heathland specialty and the New Forest is one of its strongholds
Bioblitz events
Friday 25 May
- 6.00pm: Shoresearch beach safari, Lepe Country Park. Just turn up
- 8.30pm - 11.00pm: Bat and moth night-time wander, New Forest Reptile Centre, near Lyndhurst. Booking essential - call 023 8028 3141
Saturday 26 May
- 6.30am - 8.30am: Early morning birdsong walk, New Forest Reptile Centre, near Lyndhurst. Booking essential - call 023 8028 3141
- 10.30am – 4.00pm: Bioblitz Activity Day - Join forays to nearby woods, heath and streams with a team of naturalists specialising in trees, flowers, birds, bugs, freshwater creatures, fungi and much more. New Forest Reptile Centre, near Lyndhurst. Just turn up
Last year
The New Forest National Park BioBlitz 2011 took place on 17 and 18 June. Over 200 people took part in finding hundreds of species in the special habitats of the National Park. The final tally despite some interesting weather was 394, recorded from a total of 517 records.
2011 BioBlitz results
Top 5 BioBlitz 2011 finds
1. Bracket fungus Phellinus populicola found on a Grey Poplar tree at Bolderwood - showing how excellent the New Forest is for Fungi.
2. Splachnum moss grows on Pony poo and is rare in the UK, found on heathland near Bolderwood.
3. Hidden-hole spider Cryphoeca silvicola - only a handful of records in the south-east being a northern British species; found at Bolderwood.
4. Hawfinches seen at Bolderwood feeding on cherries. The hawfinch is famed for its spectacular beak, it likes the mixed trees of the New Forest.
5. A tiny white bivalve called Loripes lucinalis, only 1cm across, native to northern Europe, and found at Lepe. Found by Jenny Mallinson, who last saw it in the New Forest 40 years ago.