Blawhorn Moss


Blawhorn Moss is a raised bog located to the northwest of the village of Blackridge, about west of Armadale in the council area of West Lothian in central Scotland. A large part of Blawhorn Moss, extending to around 69 hectares, has been managed as a National Nature Reserve by SNH since 1980. In 2001, SNH purchased a further 40 hectares, which was declared as an extension to the existing National Nature Reserve in 2008. It is the largest and least disturbed raised bog in the Lothians.
The NNR is classified as a Category IV protected area by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, and is also designated as both a Special Area of Conservation and a Site of Special Scientific Interest. The reserve is owned and managed by Scottish Natural Heritage.

Flora and fauna

Blawhorn Moss provides an important habitat for wildlife and supports many of the plant species representative of bog habitat. A number of sphagnum mosses grow here, as well as heather, crowberry, hare's-tail cotton grass and common cotton grass.
A variety of bird species breed on the moss, including red grouse, snipe, curlew and redshank. Stonechat, skylark and meadow pipit are also regularly seen in the spring and summer months at the reserve, along with a variety of butterfly, dragonfly and damselfly species.
As an example of an raised bog, Blawhorn Moss is the largest and least disturbed area of peatland in the Lothians. As well as providing important habitat for wildlife, such as moorland breeding birds, healthy peatlands absorb carbon, forming what is often referred to as a natural carbon sink. In Scotland, peat soils are thought to contain nearly twenty five times more carbon than all other plant life in the UK. Yet very few raised bogs in Central Scotland remain undamaged, as most have been affected by drainage for farming, forestry or by extensive peat cutting.

History

In the 1940s, the whole surface of Blawhorn Moss was drained to make the site more appropriate for agriculture. The moss then passed into the ownership of the National Coal Board: the surrounding areas were subjected to opencast coal mining, however the area of the current NNR remained intact. The Nature Conservancy Council purchased the western part of the moss in 1979, since when the management of Blawhorn Moss has aimed at actively improving the habitat of the moss through blocking the man-made drains that had allowed the water table in the area to drop, and which had left the area more susceptible to drought and fire. Fire damage occurring between the 1980s and 2001 further exacerbated the problem, leading to severe over-drying. A fire in 2001 damaged some of the dams which were replaced with stronger plastic pile dams braced with timber.

Visitors

One of the key function of Scotland's National Nature Reserves is to raise public awareness of the country's habitats and species. There are paths in and around the reserve, linking the reserve into the local path network surrounding Blackridge, and providing access from a carpark for visitors arriving by car. Interpretative signage is provided at the car park and at a viewpoint overlooking the moss. SNH have produced a leaflet promoting the reserve to visitors.