Nature in the Yorkshire Dales
Limestone pavements
Limestone
Pavements are found around Wharfedale, to the north of Malham
and around Ingleborough. They have taken shape over the 12,000
years since the end of the most recent Ice Age. Many were
formed by glaciers scraping the land down to bare limestone
which has since been attacked by rainwater to produce a network
of blocks (clints) and crevices (grikes). The damp, sheltered
grikes provide a refuge for woodland plants, including several
rare ferns.
Hay meadows
Traditionally
managed hay meadows form a blaze of colour along the valley
bottoms during June and July. The colour comes from a wide
range of wild flowers, the most obvious of which are wood
cranesbill, buttercup, pignut and clover. The botanical diversity
- some hay meadows contain 80 or more plant species - depends
on limited use of fertiliser and late cutting. Some of the
finest meadows can be seen in Swaledale, upper Wharfedale,
Littondale and upper Wensleydale.
Limestone grassland
The
close-cropped 'billiard table' turf of calcareous grassland
contains a surprising variety of limeloving grasses and herbs,
often grazed as much by rabbits as by sheep. Wharfedale, Ribblesdale,
Littondale and Malham form the main areas for this type of
pasture, which has usually received little in the way of fertiliser.
Birdsfoot trefoil, rock rose, mountain pansy and the aromatic
wild thyme create a distinctive flora.
Woodland
Just
1 per cent of the Dales landscape is covered by semi-natural
broad-leaved woodland, much of it now confined to steep slopes
or gills. Special to the Dales are the 'hanging' ash woods
that line the sides of dales such as Wharfedale. Also important
are the extensive oak woods around Bolton Abbey and the small
scattered woods of Swaledale. Woods act as vital refuges for
a host of animals, including badger, roe deer, nuthatch and
woodpecker.
Moorland
Rough
grassland, blanket bog and great swathes of heather cover
nearly all the high ground of the Dales. Damp grassland and
bog - often dominated by cotton grass - are home to species
of upland wader such as curlew, snipe and redshank. Heather
moorland, which colours large areas in the east and north
purple in August, is usually managed for grouse, but is important
too for bilberry, cowberry, cloudberry, merlin, golden plover
and even adders.
Rivers and riverbanks
The
characteristic brown peat staining of Dales rivers and the
natural foaming around waterfalls belie their clean, unpolluted
state. The white-breasted dipper may be seen bobbing on rocks
in the water, while the goosander and the brilliantly coloured
kingfisher are rewarding sights. Brown trout inhabit most
rivers, while those flowing westwards - the Ribble and the
Lune and its tributaries also contain salmon and sea trout.
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