Mouds Bog
The Mouds Bog Special Area of Conservation or SAC is a Natura 2000 site based close to the Hill of Allen and to Newbridge, County Kildare, Ireland. The qualifying interests by which it is protected as an SAC are the presence of three habitat types: the presence of active raised bogs, the presence of degraded raised bogs still capable of natural regeneration, and the presence of depressions on peat substrates of Rhynchosporion vegetation.
Location
The Mouds Bog SAC is located close to Newbridge, County Kildare, in the townlands of Baronstown East, Baronstown West, Barretstown, Clongownagh, Dunbyrne, Grangehiggin, Hawkfield, Roseberry and Tankardsgarden. Schedule 1 of the Statutory Instrument for this site identifies it as encompassing an area of 586.39 hectares.SAC qualification
The Mouds Bog site was designated as a Natura 2000 site in 2003 under the Habitats Directive. Statutory Instrument No. 62 of 2022, establishing the site as an SAC, was passed in 2022. The three features which qualify this site for an SAC designation are the presence of specific protected habitat types.These three habitats are:
- Active raised bogs
- Degraded raised bogs still capable of natural regeneration
- Depressions on peat substrates of the Rhynchosporion
Features
The National Parks and Wildlife Service site synopsis for the Mouds Bog Site describes the features of this SAC. The active raised bog component of the site includes wet, peat-forming high bog, with Sphagnum mosses occurring in “hummocks, pools, wet flats, Sphagnum lawns, flushes and soaks”. The SAC includes two basins of high bog, including wet quaking bog with well-formed pools, with a central mineral ridge running between them. There are small flush areas at the western side of the site, including a wet quaking soak."Mouds Bog is significant in terms of its high bog area and geographical location as it is at the eastern extreme of the range of raised bogs in Ireland. It is a site of considerable conservation significance comprising a large raised bog, a rare habitat in the E.U. and one that is becoming increasingly scarce and under threat in Ireland. This site supports a good diversity of raised bog microhabitats including hummock/hollow complexes, pools and flushes, and cutover, all of which add to the diversity and scientific value of the site".
In the Dúchas Raised Bog Natural Heritage Areas Project 2002 report by Derwin et al. to assess raised bogs for designation as Natural Heritage Areas, Mouds Bog was one of the sites selected under a range of categories - remote location, area of active peat formation, raised bogs with over 60 hectares of high bog area, geomorphology, and altitude greater than 90 metres. This report notes that this area consisted of 1605 hectares in the 1800s, and by 2002, only 17.9% of that area remained.
The first report of the Commissioners appointed to enquire into the nature and extent of the several bogs in Ireland and the practicability of draining and cultivating them, published in 1810 by the House of Commons, describes the Bog of Mouds and notes that it consists of red heath bog and "old turbary, or bog cut out", giving a total of 3,130 Irish acres, or 5,070 English acres. This report outlines plans for four drains to be constructed through Mouds Bog and also describes plans to build a road through the bog from the Lands of Caragh on the east side to the Leap of Allen to the west. The cost estimates for the main, minor and cross drains was given as £7,605 1s 6d.
Flora
The occurrence of a high percentage cover of species of Sphagnum moss is a key feature of active raised bog habitats such as this SAC. These species will also occur in the degraded raised bog habitat, but in this habitat, land use activities such as peat cutting have affected the hydrology of the bog. The third habitat at this SAC - Rhynchosporion vegetation – includes White Beak-sedge Rhynchospora alba) and/or Brown Beak-sedge. This type of habitat also includes plants such as Bog Asphodel, Carnation Sedge. Deergrass and species of sundew.Plant species such as Bog-rosemary, Cranberry, and Heather occur in this midland raised bog. A range of Sphagnum species are recorded as growing at the small pools to either side of the mineral ridge, along with Great Sundew.
Heather, Bog myrtle and Crowberry grow at the hummock/hollow system to the south. Bog mosses, including Sphagnum tenellum, are recorded at the wet hollows, while Sphagnum cuspidatum and tall Common Cottongrass occur at the wet quaking soak to the south. Downy Birch, Gorse, Purple Moor-grass, and Soft Rush are recorded to the north-east of the site at cutover areas.
The pitcher plant Sarracenia purpurea has been recorded at Mouds Bog. Two plants of this species were transferred from Termonbarry Bog to Mouds Bog in 1963, and on sampling in 1989 the plants were thriving.
Fauna
The rare Red List species Red Grouse has been recorded at this site, as have Curlew, Kestrel, Meadow Pipit and Skylark.Funding from the Heritage Council allowed for the commencement of a three-year project to halt the decline of the Curlew at Mouds Bog and four other sites in 2016.
Conservation Objectives
The conservation objectives for this site, published in 2015, include restoration of the area of active raised bog to 105.8 hectares, restoration of the habitat area, variability and distribution, and restoration of water levels, bog moss cover, microtopographical features, and central ecotope, active flush, soaks, and bog woodland areas. The objectives also include maintenance of the high bog area, transitional areas, raised bog flora and fauna, air quality with respect to nitrogen deposition, and water quality with respect to hydrochemical measures.A comprehensive restoration plan for Mouds Bog was published in 2022, which outlines the restoration measures to be carried out at the site. These include blocking of all remaining high drain bogs and of drains on cutover bogs, removal of trees, cell bunding and general site management. The drainage management plan is described, as well as the community benefits to be accrued from the actions.