Little Woolden Moss is part of Chat Moss, a larger area of peat bog land - (c) BBC |
Lancashire Wildlife Trust has bought the 100 hectare (247 acre) site at Little Woolden Moss, near Cadishead. The trust has used grants totalling around £1m from the Heritage Lottery Fund to buy the land and fund the conservation work.
By filling in the ditches, the Trust hopes cotton-grass and carpets of sphagnum mosses can be grown. The mosses store carbon, preventing it from entering the atmosphere and contributing to global warming.
This will obviously have a great impact on the birds and other wildlife in the area.
Read more about it from the BBC Website here: Little Woolden Moss to become nature reserve
By filling in the ditches, the Trust hopes cotton-grass and carpets of sphagnum mosses can be grown. The mosses store carbon, preventing it from entering the atmosphere and contributing to global warming.
This will obviously have a great impact on the birds and other wildlife in the area.
Read more about it from the BBC Website here: Little Woolden Moss to become nature reserve