West Norfolk's Wild Ken Hill releases Britain’s rarest grasshopper.
Wild Ken Hill at Snettisham has joined a project to restore the UK’s largest and rarest grasshopper by releasing over 100 Large Marsh Grasshoppers at a private part of the site.
The release at Wild Ken Hill forms part of a wider partnership project called A Hop of Hope, led by Citizen Zoo and involving Norfolk Wildlife Trust, the Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire and Natural England.
This large insect has extremely striking looks, appearing in a vibrant mix of pink and yellow and fares best in wet fens and peat bogs, a habitat that has been lost to much of the UK over the past hundred years, resulting in their near extinction.
Restricted almost exclusively to the valley mires and wet heaths of the New Forest and Dorset, this iconic species’ former distribution included wetland habitats across Norfolk and the Cambridgeshire fens. The ‘hoppers’ as they are known were released under tight security on August 22 2021.
A total of 122 of these hoppers were released at Wild Ken Hill, out of a total of 1,058 released this year as part of the project. It is hoped that the widespread habitat creation and enhancements that have taken place at Wild Ken Hill over the past few years provide a healthy, nurturing environment for the recently released grasshoppers.
Lloyd Park, conservation leader and ecologist at Wild Ken Hill said: “Without human intervention, these creatures would likely become extinct in the UK. We need to restore creatures great and small to our natural landscape, so we are thrilled to be part of this important step, or should that be hop, in the recovery and conservation of Large Marsh Grasshoppers. The way we manage wetter areas here at Ken Hill should provide them with everything they need to become an established important part of the site’s ecology.”
In the summer of 2022 it is hoped that the distinctive clicking noise made by the males will suggest that the introduced species will have completed its annual life cycle in the wild, over-wintering as eggs, hatching in early summer and passing through four nymphal instars, before becoming adults.
These invertebrates will break down and recycle organic matter with their micro-grazing and provide food for other animals as a prey species, helping to boost biodiversity and add back to the flourishing ecosystems at Wild Ken Hill.
Wild Ken Hill is a 4,000 acre regenerative agriculture, rewilding and conservation site which is home to ‘The Watches’, BBC TV’s Springwatch, Autumnwatch and Winterwatch. Find out more here
Dominic Buscall, project manager at Ken Hill said: “We’d like to take the opportunity to thank the Citizen Zoo team for their great work on this project, as well as all those involved from the other project teams, keep it up”
Citizen Zoo safely collected a limited number of wild grasshoppers at several sites in the New Forest in 2018, where half were introduced directly at a wetland site in Norfolk. The rest were brought into captivity and allowed to breed in carefully controlled conditions, where they laid more eggs than they would have done in the wild. These eggs were collected for hatching and home-rearing the following summer.
Lucas Ruzo, chief executive at Citizen Zoo said: “We’re thrilled to have released large marsh grasshoppers at Wild Ken Hill this year. The site forms part of their historical range, they’re meant to be there and it’s exciting that they have now returned.
"We’ve also always admired the ambition and work that the team at Wild Ken Hill are driving forward. They’re pushing boundaries, challenging perspectives and helping to rewild the future, so we feel fortunate and thankful to be a part of that journey.”
The organisation are dedicated to rewilding and community engagement with nature, and benefits from their involvement of everyday people in hands-on conservation and connecting people with nature.
On this project, the grasshoppers were kept by citizen keepers whoa are volunteers across England. The keepers were required to feed the grasshopper nymphs every day with fresh grass.
Stuart Green, lead entomologist at Citizen Zoo said “Four volunteer Citizen Keepers released a total of 122 young adult large marsh grasshoppers at two sites in marshy habitat at Wild Ken Hill. Each grasshopper was marked with a small spot of coloured oil paint, according to its release site, so their movement could be monitored.
"They seemed to be doing well when the site was checked eight days after release. Hopefully, by now they will have laid eggs, which will over- winter and hatch into a new generation of large marsh grasshoppers next spring.”