Published date: 6 November 2015
Closed opportunity - This means that the contract is currently closed. The buying department may be considering suppliers that have already applied, or no suitable offers were made.
Contract summary
Industry
Environmental management - 90710000
Environmental rehabilitation - 90722000
Location of contract
North West
Value of contract
£0
Procurement reference
H2H Project 3 Floral Restoration Plan
Published date
6 November 2015
Closing date
30 November 2015
Contract start date
4 January 2016
Contract end date
31 October 2016
Contract type
Not specified
Procedure type
Not specified
Contract is suitable for SMEs?
No
Contract is suitable for VCSEs?
Yes
Description
Delivery of a floral restoration plan for Headlands to Headspace (H2H), Morecambe Bay's Landscape Partnership Scheme.
Morecambe Bay Partnership wishes to appoint an independent ecologist to produce a Floral Heritage Restoration Plan.
More information
Attachments
-
- H2H Floral Restoration Plan Brief.pdf
- H2H Floral Restoration Plan Brief
Links
-
- http://www.morecambebay.org.uk/opportunities/floral-restoration-plan
- Tender notice
- Full details of the opportunity.
Additional text
-
The headlands and grasslands overlooking Morecambe Bay have a suite of species that is unique. These include such specialities as spiked speedwell, Goldilock's aster, Maidenhair fern, spotted cat's-ear and Autumn ladies-tresses, species for whom the special combination of maritime exposure, limestone soils and topography make this a home to be shared with a wider host of specialist species.
While locally many of these plants are thriving, across the landscape they are increasingly isolated with many populations having dwindled to extinction in the face of agricultural improvement, abandonment of management on sites that are difficult to graze and the increasing populations of invasive species such as cotoneaster.
Although land management can support the needs of established species in some cases it is other factors that prevent recovery - limited genetic resource, poor dispersal, isolated individuals in the population.
Rectifying this will require the integration of habitat management and a range of other targeted measures such as reintroduction, ex-situ propagation, and facilitated dispersal. Options will be explored for some of the species most in need such as:
- Golilock's aster, now apparently extinct. This species would benefit from a programme linking propagation, monitoring and reintroduction to HLS management of the coastal grassland.
- Spiked speedwell - now extinct in the Lancashire part of the Bay. Spiked speedwell (in herb-rich coastal turf) - locally abundant where it survives and appropriate land management is secured, but lost from many sites. This species would benefit from facilitated dispersal in combination with habitat management to restore it to its historic range.
These are the 2 species that have been prioritised for reintroductions under this funding. However, the following species should also be explored for re-introduction as they have the same specialist habitat requirements:
- Maidenhair fern
- Spotted cat's-ear
- Autumn ladies-tresses
The aim of this work is to
- identify suitable sites for reintroduction (receptor sites), following sufficient research from a variety of (identified) sources.
- identify suitable sites for sourcing seed/plants (donor sites), following sufficient research from a variety of sources.
- produce an Action Plan, setting out how delivery of the project should take place.
For full details please download Project Brief.
About the buyer
Contact name
Annabelle Kennedy
Address
The factory
Castle Mills, Aynam Road
Kendal
LA9 7DE
England
Telephone
01539734888
Website
http://www.morecambebay.org.uk/opportunities/floral-restoration-plan
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Closing: 30 November 2015
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