Idiots in charge
An old quarry in Leeds, England has become the home of 15 butterfly species and one species of orchid that was actually thought extinct.
However, the Leeds City Council has decided that the quarry can be put to much better use as a golf course, and have okayed plans to fill it in.
Sounds like Leeds could put its members of city council to much better use as well.
Leeds Today Evening Post
21 February 2005
RARE orchids and butterflies are at risk from a plan to fill in a quarry and re-model a golf course.
Precious wildlife inhabits the northern end of Woodhall Quarry at Calverley, Leeds, which was last used 22 years ago.
Some 15 butterfly species have been counted in the 65ft deep section and the early marsh orchid, which was thought to be extinct, is flourishing in pools. Conservationists flagged up fears over the survival of all the species if the quarry was filled in with soil and rubble alongside an upgrading of the golf course.
Fencing
Clive Saul, senior minerals officer for Leeds City Council, said it was proposed to provide a fenced-off translocation area for wildlife in the southern half of the quarry.
"Currently, the orchids depend upon the hollows around the quarry that have become seasonal or permanent ponds," he told Leeds West plans panel.
"Once a suitable translocation area has been created, it will be necessary to maintain a clean supply of water to it and this could be accomplished in several ways."
The Common Spotted orchid would be moved to a suitable area in the recently re-modelled nine-hole golf course.
Mr Saul acknowledged that there would be a risk in transplanting the orchids but they currently faced destruction anyway from trespassers and motor-cycle scramblers.
The biodiversity of the site would increase as it matured, he insisted. Susan Stead, secretary of Bradford Urban Wildlife Group, pleaded unsuccessfully for the northern half of the quarry to be spared infilling, saying it would destroy the wildlife.
"There is no guarantee that species will 'take' if they are transplanted," she said. "Some were recently transplanted at Bingley and did not appear the following season.
"The destruction of the wildlife by motor-cycle scramblers has been exaggerated," she declared. "They could be kept off the site with proper management."
The panel, however, approved plans for quarry infilling and improvement of the golf course. For safety reasons it placed restrictions on the number of lorries bringing infill material to the site.
Whilst I agree to a certain extent with your arguments about the flora and fauna in the quarry I should stress that this is being affected very badly by all the off-road bikers which are now turning up every weekend and almost every night. Living as we do in the vicinity of the quarry we are driven to distraction by the bikers and their vehicles. The sooner the quarry work starts the better !!!!!!
Posted by: Mrs V H | Wednesday, 30 August 2006 at 10:48 PM