MEETH Quarry nature reserve has benefited from part of the £500,000 of Biffa Award funding, as a Flagship project — money made available through the Landfill Communities Fund.

The support has allowed Devon Wildlife Trust to make vital improvements at eleven of its reserves including Meeth, all of which have seen work undertaken to make positive changes for local wildlife.

Among the highlights, Biffa Award has helped the trust to restore and recreate nearly 50 hectares of ‘species rich’ grassland – an important home to wildflowers including orchids, ragged robin and birdsfoot trefoil. Two hundred and fifty further hectares of existing grassland is now in better long-term management.

Five kilometres of traditional Devon hedgebanks have also been rebuilt, restored and replanted with trees including hawthorn, blackthorn, ash and oak. Wildflower seeds have been harvested from 50 hectares of existing Culm grassland to be spread on sites elsewhere.

Devon Wildlife Trust nature reserve officer Steve Threlkeld has worked on the project for the past three years.

He said: ‘Funding from the Biffa Award has made a crucial difference. For some time we’ve had a long list of improvements that we wanted to make to our North Devon nature reserves but without help we would have struggled to undertake them.

‘Now it’s very rewarding to see the positive changes that the work has made for local wildlife.

‘To see wildflowers growing where they were once lacking, to see dragonflies flying over a new stretch of canal that you have created and to see a new Devon hedgebank planted up and growing, is very satisfying.’

Local people have benefited from the funding too.

Much of the work carried out has been done by Devon Wildlife Trust staff in conjunction with local contractors, bringing money and work to the rural economy.

Local volunteers have also played a key role, while the wildlife trust has also organised a series of 16 public events showcasing the work done, its techniques and the benefits it can bring.

Matt Boydell, Devon Wildlife Trust’s land manager told the Times: ‘Our work under the Biffa Award is now in its final phase but its legacy will last. It’s helped us improve our North Devon nature reserves and we believe it’s been an example of positive land management for wildlife. We’ve learned a lot of lessons which will shape how landscapes are managed in the future.’

Gillian French, head of grants for Biffa Award, said: ‘We’re really proud to have been a part of this incredible habitat restoration project across Devon.

‘Over the past three years we have enjoyed our visits to Devon Wildlife Trust’s Meeth Quarry nature reserve and others to see how Landfill Communities funding has helped restore this unique landscape.’