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Press Release The Wildlife Trusts

Press Release Archive: Thursday 29 September 2005

Wildlife Trusts link up with Ribena growers

The Wildlife Trusts has announced a unique partnership with Ribena's blackcurrant growers throughout the UK to encourage farmers to help reverse the decline of native British wildlife.

This is the first time that The Wildlife Trusts have entered into such a scheme on this scale. Britain's most famous birdwatcher and native wildlife conservationist, Bill Oddie, is among those supporting the scheme.

Huge areas of the British countryside have been stripped of native wildlife and the challenge is now to balance the needs of farmers with proactive countryside management that benefits those species that are in most danger. It is hoped the Ribena -The Wildlife Trusts partnership is replicated across the country as an example of farm management that exceeds the current official guidelines.

Bill Oddie said: "It is vital that we all do what we can to safeguard the future of our native wildlife in Britain and that's why I am pleased to support this initiative. Ribena and Wildlife Trusts are taking a bold step and I, for one, applaud it."

The initiative takes the form of a series of Farm Biodiversity Action Plans based around a 6 point Conservation Plan prepared specifically for blackcurrant growers and include both short and long term activities:

-  when and how best to trim hedges
-  erecting bird boxes and bat boxes
-  creating rough grass margins around fields and ponds
-  sowing wild bird seed mixtures
-  establishing new hedgerows
-  replace windbreaks with native shrubs

Dormice should benefit from the new scheme (copyright Surrey Wildlife Trust)The pilot scheme has already yielded encouraging results, with reports of barn owls nesting in some of the boxes and increasing numbers of insects and small native mammals such as dormice and voles.

John Cousins, Head of Agricultural Policy, The Wildlife Trusts, said: "The Wildlife Trusts work directly with individual farmers throughout the UK to help them to work to enrich local wildlife. Indeed if we don't work with farmers and support them to help wildlife we will not change the countryside for the better. This project with Ribena, as well as providing local wildlife havens, helps provide the all important natural corridors that link up one wildlife area to the next, creating a more resilient countryside."

Beth Allen, Ribena's brand manager said: "95 per cent of Britain's blackcurrants are used to make Ribena so we have a strong connection with the British countryside. Moreover, we have a relationship of over 60 years with the nation's blackcurrant growers and we very pleased to be working with The Wildlife Trusts in this way."

Earlier this year, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs introduced legislation whereby farmers can apply for grants to carry out environmental improvements but The Wildlife Trusts - Ribena growers partnership exceeds current guidelines and it is hoped this activity is seen as exemplar and is replicated elsewhere.



Notes to editors

  1. Five things you might not know about Ribena - "Britain's best-loved drink":

    -  Ninety-five percent of all Britain's blackcurrants are used to make Ribena.
    -  Around 13,600 tonnes - that's more than 13.6 billion blackcurrants - go into making Ribena.
    -  Ribena has a unique relationship with its growers, which on some farms goes back three generations.
    -  Most of the blackcurrants that make up Ribena are picked from the bush and made into juice within 24 hours.
    -  The government supplied Ribena as a free supplement during the war, due to its Vitamin C properties.
  2. The Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust is dedicated to the conservation of wildlife and wild places throughout the historic county of Lincolnshire - from the Humber to the Wash. The Trust is Lincolnshire's leading nature conservation charity with over 25,000 members and around 100 nature reserves. The Trust is a member of a nationwide network of 47 local trusts which work to protect wildlife - The Wildlife Trusts.
  3. The Wildlife Trusts is a partnership of 47 local Wildlife Trusts across the UK, plus the Isle of Man and Alderney. Its vision is "an environment richer in wildlife for everyone" and it is the largest UK charity exclusively dedicated to conserving all our habitats and species, with a membership of more than 530,000 people including 62,000 junior members. It campaigns for the protection of wildlife and invests in the future by helping people of all ages to gain a greater appreciation and understanding of wildlife. Collectively, the local Trusts manage more than 2,500 nature reserves spanning over 80,000 hectares. The Wildlife Trusts also lobby for better protection of the UK's natural heritage and are dedicated to protecting wildlife for the future.



For further information contact

Rachel Shaw, Public Relations Officer
Tel: 01507 526667   (ansaphone out of office hours)
Fax: 01507 525732
Email: Rachel Shaw

Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust
Banovallum House
Manor House Street
Horncastle
Lincolnshire LN9 5HF

Website: www.lincstrust.org.uk


 
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