Environment
Council promises to ‘Bee Friendly’ with new roadside verge cutting plan

A new ‘bee friendly’ approach to managing Neath Port Talbot Council’s verges and grasslands has been adopted by the council.
The Bee Friendly Scheme was approved by the council’s cabinet on Friday (30 July), and will see a big increase in wildflower species and the insects such as bees which pollinate them.
The scheme has been prepared with the aim of increasing the area and extent of wildflower grassland in Neath Port Talbot to improve the environment and develop biodiversity.
Under the scheme, the council has introduced new ways of managing grassland areas to encourage nature:
- Nectar Cut (mowing changed from a 2-3 weekly cycle to a four-week cycle allowing short-flowering plants to complete their full flowering cycle and increasing the nectar available to insects).
- Conservation Cut (Certain rural verges such as lanes between villages, which will not be cut inside the flowering season (April-September).
- Meadow Cut (certain sites will be picked for meadow management. This means letting the flowers grow between April and August, and using a ‘cut and collect’ machine to remove the cuttings, which reduces the nutrients in the soil to prevent vigorous plants out-competing the wildflowers).
As soil nutrients decrease in a grassland ecosystem, the number of plant species that can survive increases, and the dominance of coarse grasses reduces. This produces a more diverse roadside environment for wildlife and adds to the biodiversity of the area.
As the scheme progresses people will start to see a wide range of plants appearing on their local verges including Bee orchid, Dandelion, Bird’s Foot Trefoil, Cat’s-ear, Black Napweed, Common vetch, Cowslip, Cuckoo Flower and Devils’s-bit scabious.
This can already be seen in Neath Port Talbot on Harbour Way and Fabian Way, where this management has been in place for a number of years under the council’s Conservation Sites Scheme. These stretches of road are attractive to both road users and pollinators. In fact, they are also likely to support populations of the endangered Shrill Carder Bee, which can be found in the coastal regions of the county.
Roadside verges and grasslands included in the NPT Bee Friendly Scheme will be marked with the scheme’s logo which features the Shrill Carder Bee.
The council says that road safety will always come first, which means some areas will still be regularly mown.
Neath Port Talbot Council’s Cabinet Member for Regeneration and Sustainable Development, Cllr Annette Wingrave, said: “We must act to reverse the rapid decline of pollinators like bees which are vital to our environment and also our economy and food. This scheme will enrich our environment by greatly increasing biodiversity and providing havens for pollinators.”
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