Meirionnydd Oakwoods and Bat Sites
On 5th July 2010, the Welsh Ministers
re-designated the Coedydd Derw a Safleoedd Ystlumod Meirion /
Meirionnydd Oakwoods and Bat Sites Special Area of Conservation
(SAC), and we have recently written to landowners and others about
this.
The SAC was originally designated in 2004 but has now been
extended to include additional areas supporting habitats and
species of European importance.
SACs in Wales form part of a Europe-wide network of sites called
Natura 2000, which aims to protect Europe's rich biodioversity. The
SAC is a network of areas of woodlands, heaths, wetlands and other
open areas stretching from Dolgellau north into Eryri. It contains
a great diversity of habitat types and species of European
importance.
As the name suggests, most of the SAC consists of oak woodlands,
but there is a great variety of other habitats, including bog and
floodplain woodlands, ravines and gorges, complex mosaics of wooded
and open areas and even buildings. The range of conditions supports
many different species including greater and lesser horseshoe bats
which forage throughout the area, often roosting in buildings
and caves, and a number of rare species of lichens and
mosses.