Reintroduced dormice thriving in Cambridgeshire wood07/11/2012 18:21:12
Dormouse doing well in Bedford Purlieus Wood. November 2012. Dormice are thriving in a Peterborough wood - and now a local farmer is helping then to branch out even further afield. The Forestry Commission found 27 dormice in boxes in Bedford Purlieus Wood, near Peterborough, during the final monthly check of the year in October. Adults, juveniles and babies were recorded, most in good health and with plenty of fat to see them through their winter hibernation. The checks - carried out by rangers and volunteers - have been crucial in charting the progress of the endangered mammals since they were released in the 200 hectare beauty spot in 2001 after becoming extinct locally. Cheryl Joyce, Forestry Commission ranger, said: "Finding so many dormice in our final check is great news. But what has really excited us is that some animals were found a long way from the original release point, adding to our hopes that they might soon spread into the surrounding countryside. That really is the next major project landmark. It just shows what sensitive habitat management allied to the passion of volunteers can achieve." Dormice boxes Clive explained: "Our tall hedgerows have been carefully managed as we have been in stewardship schemes and provide vital wildlife havens. The Wildlife Trust asked me to help by putting up boxes in two long stretches of hedgerows running in different directions from Bedford Purlieus Wood. I'm only too delighted to help. The dormice have done well and I would love for them to spread through the area." The long term decline of the dormouse is thought to be due to habitat loss and population fragmentation over many years.
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