Roadside Nature Reserves

Roadside

Common poppy (Papaver rhoeas) and common mallow (Malva sylvestris) growing on roadside verge. Kent, UK. - Terry Whittaker/2020VISION

Support our Wilder Verges

Help create wildlife corridors and connect fragmented habitats across Kent
£

What is the Roadside Nature Reserve Project?

The Kent and Medway Road Verge Project, established in 1994, works to identify, protect and manage road verges which contain threatened habitats or wildlife. These are marked by special signs.

The Project is a partnership between Kent County Council Highways and Kent Wildlife Trust. It has a Road Verge Project Officer, based with Kent Wildlife Trust, who works with a dedicated team of Voluntary Road Verge Wardens to maintain the condition of the verges and monitor their wildlife interest.

Roadside Nature Reserve Sign

Important habitats

Roadside Nature Reserves include a number of scarce and threatened wildlife habitats such as ancient woodland, heathland and chalk grassland. One chalk grassland verge supports so many plants that the flower and grass seed has been collected and used to help create new chalk grassland on nearby arable land.

Wildlife corridors

Roadside Nature Reserves can link existing wildlife areas, helping to reconnect and restore landscape so that wildlife is no longer struggling to survive in isolation. This supports a living landscape, which benefits both people and wildlife and makes nature more resilient to future change. They provide vital wildlife corridors for many species, particularly reptiles such as slow-worms and viviparous lizards, and mammals such as badgers.

Roadside Nature Reserve Butterfly

Wildlife Refuges

Some Roadside Nature Reserves hold locally or nationally rare animals or plants. These include green-flowered helleborine in Kemsing and the Adonis blue butterfly on a verge in Maidstone.

Many are also important for wild orchids including pyramidal orchid, man orchid and lady orchid. In summer, chalk grassland verges provide colourful arrays of flowers which attract many insects including bees and butterflies such as the chalkhill blue, brown argus, small skipper and marbled white.

Want to get involved?

Our Road Verge Project Officer works with a dedicated team of Voluntary Road Verge Wardens to maintain the condition of the verges and monitor their wildlife interest. You can download the list of monitoring /scrub clearance task days by visiting our volunteering page

For more information or apply to become a Voluntary Road Verge Warden, please contact Bethany Pateman on 01622 662012 or [email protected]

Join our voluntary Road Verge Team

Support our work on Wilder Verges across the county

bee

Donate £10...

...to help create crucial habitat for some of our most threatened bees
Roadside Nature Reserve

Donate £50...

...to create corridors that connect fragmented habitats
Roadside Nature Reserve

Donate £100...

...to help us influence partners to manage thousands of miles of verges for wildlife