Robot cutters help meadows to thrive

Published

13 Sep 2024

Automated cutting machines are revisiting Lancashire roadsides to help wildflowers thrive a year after they were planted in a partnership to support wildlife and biodiversity.

Robot cutters help meadows to thrive

Robots are revisiting Lancashire roadsides to help wildflowers to thrive a year after they were planted in a partnership to support wildlife and biodiversity.

After joining forces with The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside to create flower meadows along the M65 and A56 last year, we've returned to the site with the specialist remote control equipment, or robot cutters.

Using attachments such as a grass cutter and a rake, they’re cutting old wildflowers that have flowered and dropped their seeds for the new growth next year, and removing the cuttings from the meadow. National Highways Project Manager Betty Wilson explained this work will play an important role in ensuring the meadows thrive for years to come.

She said: “Wildflowers need a really nutrient-poor soil to thrive, which always seems surprising but if we leave the grass cuttings on site, the nutrients leech into the soil and promote the grass to grow and out-compete the wildflowers.

“It’s also important that the cutting is done outside of the main growing season for wildflower (May-July) as we need to give the wildflower a chance to grow and drop seeds ready for next year.”

The meadows have been funded using £1m from our Designated Funds scheme.

Robot cutter in action

Betty said:

“In 2022, we carried out baseline habitat surveys to identify what grasses and wildflower were already growing in the area and to see if it was suitable to improve into a wildflower meadow.

“Having found the area was suitable for wildflower growth, we created a scheme with our designer Amey to identify where we could and couldn’t plant within the plots, any risks and tasks on site and suitable wildflower seed mixes to use on road verges.

“We started with 24.8 hectares of poor condition grassland. By sowing wildflower seeds and maintaining the sites, we aimed to improve the grassland habitat to good condition.”

Between August and November last year, teams involved in the project planted 24.8 hectares of wildflowers, with the Trust planting an additional 65 hectares of wildflower meadow in the area.

Since then, an amazing array of wildflowers has been identified at the spot near Accrington, including yellow rattle, cuckoo flower, bugle, cowslip and tiny vetch.

Betty said:

“Wildflower meadows capture and store carbon, like woodlands, which helps fight climate change. They also provide an important breeding ground for invertebrates such as insects and a key food source for many birds, amphibians and reptiles. The meadows also provide food and a habitat for small mammals such as voles, hedgehogs and rabbits.

“Established wildflower meadows have complex root systems, which make the soil very stable. This can help mitigate flooding by holding onto rainwater rather than it washing away.”

As well as using specialist tools to speed up the work, the robot cutters are keeping contractors safe by allowing them to stand in a suitable and safe location on the verge while they get to work.

Betty added: “We’re currently on the first year of establishment, so some of the wildflower species take up to two years to flower from seed, but then continue for years to come like ox-eye daises, red champion and knapweed.”

Find out more about our Designated Funds.

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