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Encourage biodiversity

There are several ways to encourage biodiversity in your woodland. Here are some tips and steps.

Published: 22 Feb 2025

Topic: Manage forests

Increase the structural complexity in your woodland

Woodlands that are varied in their structure have a higher diversity of micro-climates and ecological niches. These benefit a greater number of species than woodlands that are not varied. 

There are numerous ways to develop a diverse woodland. For example: 

  • vary the ways in which trees in different parts of the forest are managed
  • protect and develop veteran trees and patches of scrub 
  • protect or create water features, such as ponds and bogs

Increase tree and shrub species diversity

You should also consider the variety and spatial distribution of tree and shrub species in the canopy and understory. 

The traits of each tree and shrub species affect the community of associated species and the delivery of ecosystem services. For example, the: 

  • level of shade cast 
  • water-holding capacity of its bark 
  • nutritional value of its leaf litter 

Native tree species are particularly valuable for biodiversity. So, increasing the proportion of native trees is a simple way to increase species diversity in your woodland.

Reduce external pressures

Several major factors can contribute to unfavourable ecological condition of woodlands in Scotland. Including pressures due to:

  • pests and diseases 
  • invasive non-native plants 
  • damage by wild and domestic animals 

Therefore, managers should prioritise the following actions, as necessary for their circumstances:


Manage populations of mammalian herbivores that are damaging their woodlands 

Typically, deer are the key challenge, but brown hares and sheep can also over-browse trees and understorey vegetation.


Reduce or, ideally, remove non-native plants that can out-compete and replace native plant species 

For example, species such as rhododendron are not used by many native species of animal. If rhododendron proliferates, it will much reduce biodiversity in a woodland. 

Other non-native plants present similar problems for woodland managers, such as:

  • Himalayan balsam
  • Japanese knotweed
  • giant hogweed


Take action to minimise the impact of pest and diseases 

This is a growing issue and managing tree diseases involves a combination of proactive and reactive measures, focusing on: 

  • prevention
  • early detection
  • effective intervention 

You should: 

  • implement biosecurity protocols
  • monitor for disease symptoms
  • employ management techniques such as thinning of stands of trees to improve airflow and reduce humidity, which can reduce the suitability for fungal diseases

Increase deadwood

One particularly effective way to improve biodiversity in your woodland is to increase the amount and diversity of deadwood.

Deadwood provides a habitat and food resources for thousands of species of: 

  • animals
  • plants
  • bryophytes
  • lichen
  • fungi
  • unknown but enormous numbers of microbes 

Don't give pests and diseases a home

When selecting dead wood to retain, you should take care not to create habitats for quarantine or destructive pests. 

Damaged trees, through windblow or other stressors, are susceptible to pests and diseases. These may spread into healthy trees.

This habitat is ‘partitioned’ into innumerable ecological niches, with each species occupying a different niche according to parameters such as tree:

  • species
  • diameter
  • age
  • exposure (the drying effects of sun and wind)

Different groups of organisms use deadwood at different stages of decay. 

This is because the physical nature of deadwood changes through time due to processes of decay. 

Deadwood is therefore a diverse and dynamic habitat, and different organisms require different kinds of deadwood spread differently through space and time. 

Biodiversity value and environmental benefits

Woodland creation and management deliver a wide range of environmental benefits. The extent of those benefits is determined by a range of factors, including the type of woodland, the way it is managed, and its position in the landscape. 

This guidance from Forest Research summarises the importance of these factors in the delivery of biodiversity value and environmental benefits.

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