What are NaWhat are Natural Areas?
English Nature, the Governments conservation watchdog, has subdivided England into 120 Natural Areas. The Natural Area boundaries are based on the distribution of wildlife and natural features, and on the land use pattern and human history of each area. Each Natural Area has its own conservation objectives.
There are five Natural Area zones within Herefordshire. Click on the map or one of the links below to learn more about a particular Area:
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Clun and North West Herefordshire Hills
This Natural Area consists
of the rolling hills of south-west Shropshire and north-west
Herefordshire, and is contiguous with similar countryside
in Central Wales. It is, otherwise, a rural and sparsely
populated area. Agriculture is the predominant land use,
and despite the reforestation of many woods with conifers,
ancient semi-natural woodland is still an important feature
of some parts of the Natural Area. There are also surviving
mediaeval deer parks which support nationally rare lichens
and insects. Small areas of heather moorland and unenclosed
rough grassland persist in the uplands of Clun Forest,
with some unimproved hay meadows in Herefordshire. This
area is of importance for its clean, fast-flowing rivers,
notably the Teme and its tributary the Clun, which are
part of the Severn catchment, and the Lugg, which flows
into the Wye.
Central Herefordshire
The Central Herefordshire Natural Area is fringed by the higher land of surrounding
areas.
The landscape is predominantly lowland in character, with
a few isolated flat-topped hills and a rolling plateau
in the north-east. Large blocks of woodland occur on the
more distinct hills and dingle woodlands occur where river
sections run through a steep valley.
The Natural Area contains the floodplains of the River Wye, which flows across the area from west to south east, and the River Lugg, which flows north to south and joins the River Wye east of Hereford City. The valleys of the Rivers Frome and Arrow (major tributaries of the Lugg) are also significant features with areas of good wildlife habitat.
Dean Plateau and Wye Valley
The landscape of the
Dean Plateau and Wye Valley is varied with the main features
being the large plateau of the Forest of Dean, which reaches
a height of about 200 metres, the valley of the River Wye
which passes through a deep limestone gorge, the Woolhope
Dome which supports large-scale plantations, and the Monnow
Valley along the western boundary of the Natural Area.
The Natural Area is dominated by woodland with the largest
areas of ancient semi-natural woodland in the Wye Valley
and Woolhope Dome. Remnants of heathland are still found
within some forested areas.
The Natural Area also includes the middle and most of the lower sections of the River Wye, plus its many tributaries and numerous streams. The River Wye is an internationally important river system and supports numerous species of conservation interest including fish, freshwater invertebrates and floating water-crowfoot vegetation.
Malvern Hills and Teme Valley
The landscape of the
Malvern Hills and Teme Valley Natural Area is dominated
in the south by the nine-mile long range of the Malvern
Hills which rises sharply from the Severn Valley floodplain
to a height of about 400 metres. The hill tops are covered
by acid grassland and small areas of heathland, merging
into bracken, scrub and woodland on the lower slopes. To
the west and north of the Malverns lies a series of roughly
parallel wooded hills separated by low-lying, intensively
farmed land and orchards. The River Teme, with its steep
sides and wooded dingle valleys, has a narrow floodplain
supporting arable and pasture land.
The Malvern Hills are mainly composed of granitic rocks which are amongst the oldest in Britain. The hills to the west and north are of Silurian limestone. The River Teme cuts through Old Red Sandstone upstream of Knightwick and below this point it meanders across Keuper Marls. The varied geology is reflected in the soils which range from thin acidic soils on the Malverns, through deeper, neutral soils over the Old Red Sandstone to calcareous soils on the limestone ridges.
Black Mountains & Golden Valley
This Natural Area is
the north-eastern end of an extensive dissected plateau
which extends into Wales. To the west, the landscape is
dominated by the bulk of the Black Mountains which support
upland grassland, heathland and some blanket bog as well
as springline flushes. There are numerous rock outcrops
and screes. In the eastern part of the Natural Area the
more fertile valley bottoms of the Golden Valley have a
long history of cultivation and large arable fields are
found here. Woodlands are a prominent feature of the landscape
in the north and east of the Natural Area, particularly
on the low ridge between the Golden Valley and the adjoining
lowlands. The rivers and streams of this Natural Area are
fast flowing, of high water quality and are important wildlife
corridors.
Old Red Sandstone forms the bedrock throughout the area and gives rise to distinctive red brown soils. Alluvial deposits have created fertile soils in the valley floors whilst in the upland areas the soils tend to be thin and acidic.
» Visit the Natural England site for more information.
Herefordshire Nature
Trust is a registered charity, number 220173,
and a company limited by guarantee, number 743899.
Registered Office: Lower House Farm, Ledbury Rd, Tupsley, Hereford, HR1 1UT
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