Habitat Management for Mendip Dormice

Dormouse on blackberries

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project

Habitat Management for Mendip Dormice

A funded project to help farmers and land managers to reconnect and restore habitat for one of Mendip’s most charismatic species.

The Habitat Management project 2024

Dormice are often regarded as “canaries in the coalmine” – as a woodland-specialist, a drop in dormouse numbers can reflect a loss or fragmentation of good-quality woodland habitat, something that is likely to impact many other woodland species. Restoration, creation and linking-up of scrubby wooded habitats is needed to help dormice populations recover, bringing benefits for other wildlife also hard-hit by the loss of scrub, woodland and hedgerows in the landscape.

Our grassland and woodland reserves in Mendip form core areas in Somerset’s Nature Recovery Network. It's vital that we secure biodiversity here and prevent further habitat fragmentation through restoration and habitat creation programmes.
Rachel Fickweiler
Head of Nature Reserves
Dormouse nest found during survey

Hazel dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius) nest found during monthly dormouse survey - Terry Whittaker/2020VISION

project

Phase one - 2023

Dormouse populations in Mendip cannot recover without the help of land managers and farmers. The Habitat Management for Mendip Dormice project was given funding in summer 2023 by the Mendip Hills National Landscape’s Farming in Protected Landscapes programme.

Dormouse in tree

Dormouse - James Maben

project

Phase two - 2024/25

Phase 2 of this project is a collaborative effort between many Mendip landowners all interested to help this struggling species. Additional project partners include A Patch Wilder, Bradley Cross Farm, Sidcot Hill Farm, Carscliff Farm, Longbottom Farm, Avon Wildlife Trust, and PTES.

We’re delighted to share that Somerset Wildlife Trust has secured new funding to support a group of neighbouring nature-friendly landowners in the Mendip Hills to enhance habitats for dormice. This builds on the positive momentum of the group from the first phase of the Habitat Management for Dormice Project in 2023, with further Farming in Protected Landscape (FiPL) funding now granted to help boost declining populations of this charismatic species on their land in Phase 2.

The UK population of dormice has declined by over two-thirds since 2000 alone. In Mendip, long-term volunteer nest box counts indicate that a similar downward trend is also likely to be occurring locally, requiring urgent action to turn things around. Opportunities for “easy win” yet significant habitat improvements were identified during a number of site visits in 2023 and the lack of scrub was highlighted as an issue in Mendip, especially where deer browsing pressure is at its highest.

Project team

The project is led by Lila Morris, Mendip Conservation Officer, supported by Mendip reserves staff carrying out surveys and habitat management.

Lila Morris

Lila Morris

Lila Morris, Mendip Conservation Officer

Lila is an ecologist, land management adviser and wildlife surveyor, who works with volunteers and landowners to restore wildlife habitats, and has mapped habitats across Mendip to understand how well they interconnect as ecological networks. She is passionate about giving people opportunities to learn traditional skills such as coppicing and hedge laying, as well as survey skills. 

Contact: email lila.morris@somersetwildlife.org or call 01823 652474

Phase 2 of this project is funded by match funding from Forest of Avon Trust, Longleat Estate, Mendip Hills National Landscape, Aggregate Industries, Heidelberg Materials, and a Section 106 agreement relating to Torr Works.

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