The success of an ambitious five-year landscape-scale restoration project to revitalise vast areas of important moorland habitat is being celebrated.

Image of the moor

Since 2010 the MoorLIFE project, supported by €5m from the EU LIFE+ fund, and €1.7m from partners, has seen work take place to protect and restore four sites in the Peak District and South Pennines - Black Hill, Bleaklow, Turley Holes and Rishworth Common.

MoorLIFE, delivered by conservation specialists, Moors for the Future Partnership, has re-vegetated an area of bare peat the size of 1,300 football pitches and protected about 2,500 hectares of active blanket bog.

Now a report, charting the dramatic changes in the landscape as a result of the work, has been launched and is available to download.

Laura King, MoorLIFE Project Manager said: “This fantastic project is having a positive impact on this iconic landscape.

“Over the last five years MoorLIFE has overseen the transformation of these four areas and the Layman’s Report illustrates the scale of the challenge.”

MoorLIFE has been at the forefront of ground-breaking work to develop new techniques to reintroduce important mosses and plants.

Brendon Wittram, Conservation Contracts Manager said the terrain, unpredictable weather conditions and necessary restrictions in place during the bird breeding seasons each provided their own challenges.

“The location of the sites meant a lot of the materials including tonnes of heather cuttings, fertiliser and grass seed needed to stabilise the bare peat had to be flown in by helicopter.

“A total of 200,000 moorland plants such as cotton grass, bilberry, cloudberry and crowberry were planted by hand, 1.5 billion Sphagnum moss fragments were spread and 30,000 Sphagnum plug plants were introduced which form the basis of new blanket bog.”

The work did not end there with 4,000 stone and heather bale dams built to hold rainwater on the moors, sustain growing plants, halt the spread of wildfires and slow the flow of downpours into our reservoirs and rivers to reduce flood risk.

The restoration of blanket bogs, devastated by 150 years of industrial pollution, summer wildfires, and erosion, will play a key role in the UK’s action on climate change, resilience to natural disasters such as floods and fire, water quality and biodiversity.

The report is available to download at:

http://www.moorsforthefuture.org.uk/moorlife .