| Where the primary purpose of a woodland is economic,
    for example, to produce a crop of trees for wood products or gamebirds for commercial
    shoots, then management will undoubtedly be necessary. This may involve removing competing
    species, controlling pests, predators and diseases, as well as ensuring adequate nutrition
    for the economic species involved. No management is certainly an
    option, but it is never going to produce an economically viable product. Where the purpose of a woodland is for wildlife benefit or
    conservation, no management might be considered to be an option. However, it is probably
    safe to say that within Britain, no single woodland has remained uninfluenced by human
    activities. This is because woodlands provided essential materials for every day living.
    In pasture-type woodland, sheep and cattle would also be grazed. Pigs would be turned out
    to eat acorns and beech mast in the autumn. Thus woodlands were of great economic
    importance.  
    The species which inhabit Britain's woods are
    therefore there in many cases because of past activities such as coppicing, rather than despite them. They are present because the
    conditions which prevail in such woods fit their habitat requirements. Species such as
    these have developed in tandem with man's influence over the centuries. 
    
      
          | 
        Activities such as coppicing in
        woodlands provided a vital, continuous local supply of wood products in the past. This had
        the side effect of continually creating new glades in woodlands to replace those which had
        grown over with time. This encouraged great biodiversity in the coppiced woodlands.
        Wildflowers, grasses and brambles would progressively colonize each new glade as the tree
        canopy was opened up. The animal species associated with these plants would also then
        follow.  | 
       
     
    Removal of all human activity within
    a woodland will usually result in the development of dark, dense woods. This will favour a
    relatively small number of species which prefer this type of habitat. However, it will
    also result in the elimination of all those species which either require higher light
    levels, or which are dependent on other species with this requirement. If high
    biodiversity and a wide range of woodland species is the goal, then management will be
    necessary to create structural diversity within the woodland.  
    A woodland may also be managed in order to favour
    the conservation of particular species, for example, the dormouse.
    This will usually also have the side effect of promoting a whole range of other species
    with similar habitat requirements.    
    Woodlands can be and often are, managed
    simultaneously for commercial products, conservation and recreation. However, this
    inevitably leads to conflicting needs and management has to be flexible enough to make
    decisions based on whichever is the current priority. 
      
    Continue to Planting 
       |