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Water

Seventy per cent of the UK’s drinking water comes from the uplands and the Moorland Association takes the responsibility for its protection very seriously.

As peat soils dry out through drainage, wildfires, or over dominance of shrubby plants like heather, peat, and the carbon stored in it, can be washed into water courses. This turns water brown and can cost water companies – and their customers – large sums of money to remove the discolouration to meet drinking water standards.

Land managers have a key role to play in understanding the interactions between vegetation management and water catchments to minimise colour run-off reaching reservoirs. There are few tools at their disposal, but careful use of, and in combination, burning, mowing and grazing patterns can be sympathetically deployed.

Water

Slowing the flow, reducing erosion of peat and introducing Sphagnum moss has improved water quality on this water catchment site also managed for grouse and sheep grazing.

​As with carbon capture, good moorland water quality depends on a layer of Sphagnum moss acting as a protective cloak between peat and other taller plants. Sphagnum not only slows water flow across the surface – potentially mitigating against flash flooding further downstream – it also filters out any colour along the way. Read more about grouse moor management and flooding.

Many of our projects, including bare peat vegetation, drain blocking and raising the moor’s water table help reduce the erosion of peat into water courses and encourages Sphagnum to grow – and filter the water for free.

Moorland Association works with Natural England, Yorkshire Water, United Utilities and peatland restoration partnerships to find workable conservation solutions, while securing the long-term future of grouse moor management and agriculture on the land.

There is more carbon locked up in UK peat soils than in all the trees of Britain and France. It represents 42% of our entire carbon stock. That is why Moorland Association does so much work to protect these valuable peatlands. ​Read more

Our heather moorlands and their fringes offer some of the finest wildlife habitats in the country thanks to careful land management and the great skill of dedicated gamekeepers. Read more

70% of the UK’s drinking water comes from the uplands and the Moorland Association takes the responsibility for its protection very seriously. Read more

​It is important that grouse moor managers work closely with farmers, commoners and graziers to strike the right balance on this sensitive land. Grouse and sheep each need the best nutrition they can get from upland heath and blanket bog. Read more

In England grouse moor management creates 42,500 work days a year and is responsible for over 1,500 full-time posts. Of these, 700 are directly involved in grouse moor management, with a further 820 in related services. Read more

MA owners and managers work hard to mitigate risks. They liaise with the Fire and Rescue Service and work with experienced wildfire experts to issue strategic wildfire management planning advice on wildfire breaks. Read more

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