A female black grouse, known as a grey hen
A female black grouse, known as a grey hen

MORE than 150 delegates attended a sell-out seminar which looked at grouse moor management.

The 11th North of England Grouse Seminar, organised by the Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT), featured a series of presentations on the management of grouse moors.

Topics ranged from wader conservation to post-fire vegetation succession on blanket bog.

Held at The Morritt Arms, Greta Bridge, near Barnard Castle, Dave Newborn, the longest-serving member of the trust’s uplands research group, highlighted his extensive research on respiratory cryptosporidiosis in red grouse, presenting results on distribution, prevalence, impacts on survival and productivity as well as potential remedies to parasite problems.

This was followed by organiser Dr Dave Baines, who is director of upland research, stressing the importance of grouse moor management for declining curlew and other wading birds.

Results from a new trust study on post-burning moorland vegetation succession were compared with those from the long-term rotational burning experiment at Moor House National Nature Reserve by Dr Sian Whitehead, while Dr Philip Warren’s paper focused on black grouse range expansion.

Additionally, the latest findings from ten years of the GWCT’s Langholm Moor demonstration project were reported by Dr Sonja Ludwig. These showed changes in numbers of red grouse in relation to grouse moor restoration.

Apart from GWCT-led talks, Steph Bird-Halton and Amanda Craig, from Natural England, spoke on how working with grouse moor managers can achieve better outcomes, and Professor Rob Marrs, of the University of Liverpool, gave a run-down on the pros and cons of heather burning.

Dr Baines said: “Everyone involved worked hard to ensure the event was a success.

“We thank the 160 delegates that attended and commiserate with those that couldn’t either because of the snow or because tickets were sold out,” he added.

“We hope everyone took at least one message home that will make their moorland management even more sustainable across multiple outcomes.”

The Marquess of Downshire, a trustee of GWCT, who has chaired the Trust’s Upland Research Steering Committee for the past two years, chaired the event.