Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve

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Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve wwwwildscotlandorgukwpcontentuploads20130

Location
  
South Lanarkshire, Scotland, United Kingdom

Nearest city
  
Carluke, Hamilton, Lanark and Lesmahagow

Established
  
1981: Cleghorn Glen is declared a National Nature Reserve 1987: Cartland Craigs is declared part of the reserve, forming the Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve 2007: Chatelherault, Falls of Clyde, Mauldslie Woods and Nethan Gorge are declared parts of the Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve

Governing body
  
Scottish Natural Heritage Scottish Wildlife Trust South Lanarkshire Council

Nearest cities
  
Carluke, Hamilton, Lanark, Lesmahagow

The Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve is a nature reserve made up of six separate sites in the Clyde Valley region of South Lanarkshire, Scotland. Those sites are Cartland Craigs (known locally as Cartland Crags), Chatelherault, Cleghorn Glen, Falls of Clyde, Mauldslie Woods and Lower Nethan Gorge.

Contents

Five of the six sites, located in and around the towns of Lanark, Lesmahagow and Hamilton, are designated Sites of Special Scientific Interest because of the abundance of native woodland found within them, as well as other rare flora. Mauldslie Woods near Carluke has been described as an experimental addition to the National Nature Reserve and has no other official designation. Some endangered species also exist within the sites. The most prime example is the Falls of Clyde, in which there are endangered peregrine falcons and rare tundra plant life that has survived on a cliff face since the last Ice Age.

History

The reserve's history began 10,000 years ago when melting glaciers began eroding the red sandstone in the area, forming the valleys and gorges that make up the reserve.

Sites

Six sites make up the Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve.

Cartland Craigs

Cartland Craigs is a site of special scientific interest on the outskirts of Lanark and the village of Cartland. It is owned wholly by Scottish Natural Heritage. It is home to several rare species of animal, including roe deer, badgers and red squirrel, as well as the remains of Castle Qua, a medieval structure.

Mouse Water, a tributary of the River Clyde, runs through the site.

Falls of Clyde

The Falls of Clyde are a collection of four waterfalls along the river Clyde, near the villages of New Lanark and Stonebyres. However, only the three falls near New Lanark (Bonnington Linn, Corra Linn and Dundaff Linn) are included in the Falls of Clyde site of special scientific interest, with the other, Stonebyres Linn, being approximately 2 miles further downstream.

Scottish Wildlife Trust, a charitable organisation, manages the Falls of Clyde site, focusing on the preservation of the endangered or protected wildlife on the grounds, such as peregrine falcons, roe deer and badgers. As well as this fauna, there is a great deal of interesting, protected and rare plant life to be found within the Falls of Clyde. For example, there are fields of heather, rowan, bluebells and the slopes of the natural amphitheatre beneath Corra Linn are home to a rare tundra plant life which has survived since the last ice age. There also exists a large variety of native woodland on the site. Much of Scotland's native woodland has been destroyed or replaced with exotic trees by human activity.

Within the Falls of Clyde there is an abundance of architecture, including Bonnington Pavilion, an 18th-century house of mirrors, an iron footbridge and the 15th-century Corra Castle, all of which are in ruins.

References

Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve Wikipedia