Cardiff Adopts ‘No-Cut’ Mowing Approach Across 33 New Sites to Support Biodiversity Until September

Nature friendly ‘one cut’ mowing regimes, where the grass is not cut until September, are due to be introduced at 33 new sites in Cardiff this year.

The new sites are strategically located in parks and safe highway locations, aligning with Cardiff’s commitment to its One Planet response – a holistic approach to address climate change and biodiversity loss.

As the grass grows undisturbed until September, Cardiff’s green spaces will flourish, benefiting essential pollinators like bees and butterflies. This initiative represents a significant step toward a more sustainable and ecologically responsible city.

Covering approximately 8 hectares of parkland The new sites mean that in total 122.24 hectares of land – the equivalent to 272 football pitches – across 144 different sites will be managed for the benefit of nature, including important pollinators such as bees, butterflies that our food chains rely on.

Switching to ‘one cut’ per year has resulted in significant gains for biodiversity when compared to other areas of Cardiff where the grass is cut more frequently.

Biodiversity monitoring work carried out in Cardiff, with help of volunteers from Cardiff Local Nature Partnership, showed that 89% of ‘no mow’ sites surveyed were home to more than 11 different species, compared to just 11% of more frequently mown areas.

A council spokesperson said: “The positive impact these ‘one cut’ sites have on nature is clear, which is why the amount of council-owned land managed in this way has increased every year since a nature emergency was declared in Cardiff in late 2021.”

The biodiversity surveys highlighted that frequently mown areas, that were  once only home to perennial rye grass, buttercups, daisies and dandelions, have flourished since moving to ‘one cut’ per year mowing regimes. A wide range of species can now be found across these sites, including red clover, cuckoo flower, goatsbeard, pignut, common birds-foot trefoil, as well as waxcap fungi.

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