Earthworm among Autumn leaves

Soil is Alive!

We are unearthing the value of the soils in the Royal Parks, through an action plan of research, conservation and landscape management within the parks.

Soil is the world’s most biodiverse habitat but is the least appreciated and explored. It is alive with more than half of the world’s species living in soil, but it tends not to feature prominently in debates about biodiversity and the climate emergency, because we simply don’t know that much about it.

So why is soil so important? And what do the Royal Parks’ soils do for London?

Soils are a vital part of our ecosystems, informing the life cycles of plants and animals, the water cycle, the carbon cycle, and pretty much every natural process on the planet.  

In their context within one of the world’s busiest cities, the ‘services’ that the Royal Parks’ soils provide include:

  • Soil is the medium in which all of the Parks’ plants and trees grow (with the exception of a minority of pond plants).

  • Soil provides habitat for a huge variety of micro and macro-organisms, from bacteria and protozoa to worms, nematodes, springtails and fungi.  One-quarter of all of the organisms in the world live in soil - each cubic metre of topsoil can contain up to 1.5kg of living organisms! Many of these do important jobs in our ecosystem, including recycling organic waste into nutrients for plants and trees to grow.

  • Soil modifies the atmosphere, emitting and absorbing, storing and filtering gases including pollutants and carbon dioxide, helping to improve the quality of the air in and around the Parks. 

  • Soil stores and slows the movement of water, helping to prevent flooding in times of heavy rainfall as well filtering nutrients and minerals and helping to purify our water.

  • Soil acts as carbon pool to both absorb and store carbon from the atmosphere. The majority of the UK’s terrestrial carbon is held in peatlands and their associated habitats, but parkland soils also have a role to play.

  • Soil provides a physical and cultural environment for all of people’s activities within the Royal Parks – we walk, exercise and play on the soil.

  • The Parks’ soils act as an archive of our geological, pedological and archaeological heritage. London’s parks form most of the city’s land that hasn’t been built on, and the 5000 acres of the Royal Parks contain a wealth of information about London’s heritage.  While the Parks’ landscapes have been altered over the centuries, their soils contain rich evidence of London’s history.

Soil is an ecosystem

You’ve probably heard soil being described as ‘sandy’ ‘clay’ or ‘loam’. The relative proportions of sand, silt and clay particles in a soil determine its texture and vary according to the underlying geology of a place.  

But soil is not just sand, silt or clay – it is a natural habitat. It is alive and when healthy is teeming with life. Soil also contains organic matter – living plants, animals and fungi and the decaying matter that they recycle and feed on, as well as air and moisture. 

Soil structure is created as the mineral particles and organic matter clump together into small soil blocks. These are stacked around one another leaving void spaces of various sizes, called pores, which allow the movement of air and moisture through the soil and provide spaces for colonisation by soil microbes and microorganisms. This structure is essential to many important soil functions, including aeration, drainage, water storage, root development of plants and microbial activity.

Children examining soil samples for invertebrates
Youngsters learn about soil with our Learning team

The different sized particles in sandy, clay or loam soils stack more tightly or loosely, creating differences in how much moisture, air and nutrients that they hold, and supporting different varieties of plant life. The texture of a soil strongly influences its physical and chemical, and therefore, also its biological and horticultural properties. For example, soils with a high proportion of clay particles are well-known for high-nutrient retention but, are prone to waterlogging in wet weather if compacted, and cracking in dry weather. Soils with a high proportion of sand particles are freely draining, which means that nutrients can easily wash through them, and are prone to erosion by wind and rainfall.

Knowing the type of soil in an area informs our knowledge of what plants and habitats it can host. Wildflower meadows, for example, grow best in nutrient-poor, free draining soils, whereas marginal plants prefer the water-retentive properties of silty or clay soils.

Acid grassland – a nationally scarce habitat, but that can be found in some of Royal Parks (Richmond Park, Bushy Park, and to a lesser extent parts of Greenwich Park and Primrose Hill), is even more specialized. It grows on open areas of free-draining sandy or gravel soils where the reduction in nutrients over the years has resulted in an acidic pH. It is important as a habitat for many ground-dwelling and burrowing insects, including mining bees and wasps and yellow meadow ants, as well as a wealth of other species such as skylarks and meadow pipits.

Soil health and people

The Royal Parks receive a combined 77 million visits per year – that’s a lot of footfall! And with high footfall comes the greatest difficulty the Parks face when it comes to maintaining healthy soils: compaction.

Compaction occurs from downward pressure on the soil – predominantly from human use. Anytime a force comes into contact with soil can cause compaction, but in the Royal Parks it is predominantly from people walking. The pressure squeezes the soil, damaging its structure by reducing the pore spaces that should hold air and moisture. Use of the parks by people results in compaction of the soil, which reduces oxygen and soil biota and increases waterlogging. A healthy, well developed soil will consist of around 55% air, water and organic matter by volume, and only around 45% mineral. A compacted soil, on the other hand, can be up to 85% mineral, and only 5% each of air, water and organic matter.

Compaction and its knock-on effects put stress on plants and trees, resulting in poor growth and even death. As a result, the variety of plant life and diversity of habitats in the parks can decrease, to the detriment of the animals – large and small – who live there. Reduced biodiversity would also affect people’s enjoyment of the parks – many of our visitors come to enjoy nature, and without a variety of plants, trees and wildlife, the parks would be a less enjoyable place to be.

In order to sensitively manage the Parks to preserve them for future generations, we need to balance the use by people with the need to preserve and enhance biodiversity. We know that some visitors come to the Parks to play sport or to attend festivals and events, whereas others might want a quiet walk in nature or to sit and watch the birds. We also know that biodiverse parks are more appealing to visitors, so we want to maintain a wide variety of trees, plants and creatures to enable visitors to feel immersed in nature when they visit. We have no plans to reduce sports provision, recreation space and large and small-scale events. Instead we are seeking to better understand our landscapes, including the soil beneath them, to inform our management plans and identify opportunities for habitat creation, restoration and enhancement.

What are The Royal Parks doing to maintain and improve our soils?

How can visitors help?

There are many ways that you can get involved and help save our soil, from small actions when visiting to parks, to signing up to help with our research:

Tread carefully

Wherever possible, stick to designated paths and avoid cut-throughs, particularly in our Sites of Special Scientific Interest: Richmond and Bushy Parks.

Where you find areas of long grass or wildflower meadow, these are wonderful habitats for invertebrates and small mammals, and provide forage for birds, so avoid walking across these where possible. In Richmond and Bushy Parks, look out for mounds and tussocks within our extensive swathes of acid grassland. These are ant hills created over centuries by yellow meadow ants, and are part of the grassland ecosystem, so please do avoid treading on them.

Leave no trace

Put litter in our bins, and pick up after your dog.

Learn with us

Become a citizen scientist or volunteer and have fun while learning in a beautiful environment.

Stay up to date

Sign up to our newsletter to be the first to know what is happening in our parks. 

The future of soil preservation in our parks

Our action plan for soil

In addition to these existing measures for maintaining and improving soil health across the parks, we are developing our action plan for soil. 

Over the next seven years, the Royal Parks will be building on our existing actions for soil health to create a more formal strategy for looking after our soils.  The actions that we will be taking include:

Gaining a better understanding of our natural resources, including soils:

  • Commissioning more expert surveys of soil health, composition and structure across the Parks to better understand what lies beneath our feet, and to aid planning of our habitat and biodiversity initiatives.
  • Planning further soil-related citizen science projects to record and monitor data about soil and soil-dwelling creatures, helping to expand out surveying and monitoring capacity.
  • Exploring the case for change in event restoration work schedules to include deeper mechanical aeration of soil before re-turfing.

Conservation and climate resilience

  • Continuing to protect root zones of veteran trees, and adjusting mowing to improve soil health in root zones of our younger trees
  • Identifying areas for reduced mowing and meadow grassland
  • Reducing leaf collection to allow composting in-situ by soil creatures
  • Further reductions in digging in horticultural beds, through greater proportion of perennial plants and fewer seasonal bedding displays, and monitoring the impact of these interventions on soil health
  • Use of grazing instead of mowing in selected locations to reduce compaction
  • Installation of more swales and rain gardens to attenuate movement of water

Sustainable access to nature

  • Use of reduced mowing to discourage walking in sensitive areas.
  • Improved signage to divert visitors from desire lines (short cuts that result in the wearing down of vegetation and compaction of soil).
  • Improved wayfinding and interpretation to encourage use of paths and picking up after dogs. 
  • Better communication with our visitors about the importance of healthy soils for biodiversity, and how visitors can help to keep our soils healthy.

  • Longford River in Bushy Park in spring

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