
Kilsture SWSEIC iNaturalist Project
The Kilsture Forest Community Group were keen to develop their role as co-custodians of the forest through a Citizen Science project, film screenings, surveys (including mycorrhizal networks), storytelling and an artists residency.
In 2018 the forest was being sold by Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS) so the community rallied to reverse the planned disposal. KFCG opted for a partnership with FLS to manage the woodland and have since signed a formal memorandum of understanding with FLS in 2024. The group was keen to take on more responsibility for habitat restoration and enhancement and whilst they appreciated the need to thin woodland to increase biodiversity in the long term, they were concerned about the potential negative impacts on the health of the forest, when thinning is undertaken commercially at scale. Their project activities helped them to:
Explore the Forest Ecosystem Map here …
“By observing the natural processes that drive the forest ecosystem: plant and soil interaction, regeneration and decay, the rate of water flowing through the forest, our community is becoming attuned to the indicators for of forest health and how these inform management for biodiversity”.

Bat walk at Kilsture. Night photography by Ted Leeming
Events included: