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Conservation Work

Working together to protect, enhance and celebrate what makes The Clwydian Range and Dee Valley special.

Year round, teams of staff, partners and volunteers fight to conserve the habitats and wildlife that make our National Landscape so valued.

In the Discover and Explore section of this website you can find out more about the unique heritage, landscapes and wildlife that make the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley such a special place.

The National Landscape team lead and work jointly on a host of conservation projects that protect and enhance the unique qualities of the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley.  The projects protect various qualities such as landscapes, wildlife, heritage and culture.

In recent times, as more people have come to appreciate the beauty of the area and have increased ability to travel here, management has also included a programme of enabling tourism while balancing increasing visitor numbers with protection of the very landscape they have come to see.

We want people to come and enjoy the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley National Landscape, but we also wish to make sure that everyone benefits, from our communities and local businesses to conservation projects and environmental initiatives, and of course the visitors themselves.

Llantysilio

Wildfire

Here at the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley National Landscape, protecting our incredible natural environment from the devastating impact of wildfires is a top priority.

Grazing Belted Galloway cattle

Conservation Grazing

Conservation grazing involves using livestock to manage sites for wildlife and to promote biodiversity.

Contour bunding of peatland

National Peatland Action Programme

The Clwydian Range and Dee Valley National Landscape, celebrated for its rolling hills and rich cultural heritage, is also home to vital, yet often unseen, ecosystems: our peatlands.

volunteer picking balsam

Tackling Invasive non-native species

Invasive non-native species (invasive species) are plants or animals that have been introduced by humans to corners of the world where they wouldn’t naturally be found.

Ash trees

The Ash Project

Ash is the 3rd most common tree in the UK. Over 1000 species are associated with it, 45 of which are “obligate”, meaning they rely on the Ash for their...

A curlew

Curlew Connections Wales

Curlew Connections Wales is a wader conservation project supported by Welsh Government’s Nature Networks Fund, delivered by the Heritage Lottery Fund.

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