SCOTTISH gamekeepers and land managers have launched a new campaign to raise awareness of the wildlife thriving on Scottish moorland – and counter the 'misconception' that nature reserves are the only places to find wildlife.

The gamekeepers' #WeHaveWildlife campaign has been set up as a response to Chris Packham’s Bioblitz tour and its #WeWantWildlife hashtag, which was this week visiting various sites throughout Scotland recording every plant and wildlife species seen along the way.

“Disappointingly none of the Bioblitz sites being visited are on moorland, with the tour focusing around nature reserves and wildlife centres," said Lianne MacLennan, coordinator of the Grampian and Angus Glens Moorland Groups and organiser of the campaign. "We support the Bioblitz exercise in establishing a benchmark for wildlife – however moorland sites should have been included as part of this audit to gain a true picture of the wildlife we actually have around us.”

Ms MacLennan said that managed moorlands have wildlife in abundance, from craneflies to adders, lizards, mountain hares and red deer, to wild plants including orchids, juniper and heather, to ground-nesting birds, owls and raptors.

She stressed that a wide range of rare bird species including curlew, lapwing, black grouse and merlin are thriving on managed moors as a result of predator control and habitat management – not least the red grouse, the only species unique to the UK, found only on moorland.

“There is an abundance of wildlife throughout the whole of our countryside, with moorland in particular offering a rich biodiversity in which a wide variety of wildlife and habitat can flourish, thanks to the efforts of our gamekeepers and land managers," said Ms MacLennan.

A biodiversity audit conducted by the Game Conservancy Deutschland found 103 different bird species thriving on Glenogil Estate in the Angus Glens this year – an increase of 51% since 2015. The study also recorded a higher number of breeding pairs of golden plover found on Glenogil Estate than in the whole of Germany.

Gamekeepers across Scotland are also making concerted efforts to ensure the survival of the black grouse. In Strathbraan, Perthshire, a 20-year programme of woodland planting, grazing reduction, rotational heather burning, predator and bracken control has seen black grouse rise from very low numbers to around 50 male birds in 2018.

Wildlife Estates Scotland’s latest annual report also showed that eleven accredited estates reported the presence of golden eagles, with seven of these reporting 19 pairs. Eleven estates also recorded sightings of hen harriers with four reporting 18 breeding pairs. Buzzards were also reported on 20 estates, with a total estimated population of over 920 birds.

Gamekeeper Garry MacLennan from the Angus Glens Moorland Group, said: “Bioblitz audits have become valuable tools for ecologists to get an overview of a site’s living species and we have been working hard with accredited scientists and research institutes to chart the array of species found on estates within our moorland group. We are committed in our conservation efforts and given the recent studies, it is evident that keepered ground is notably more successful for bird conservation than other areas.

“Mr Packham believes that nature reserves throughout the country are the only places to see abundant wildlife however, this is simply not true," said Mr MacLennan. "There are many conservation success stories across Scotland’s grouse moors, not least the breeding success of some moorland birds and waders, including species of conservation concern such as curlew and lapwing. We would be delighted to welcome Mr Packham and his Bioblitz team onto our moorland to gain an understanding of the vast array of wildlife flourishing on Scotland’s moors.”