GS2: Permanent grassland with very low inputs (outside SDAs) - GOV.UK
Contents
- How much will be paid
- Where to use this option
- Where this option cannot be used
- Features that can be included in this option
- Related Mid Tier options
- How this option will benefit the environment
- Aims
- Prohibited activities
- Recommended management
- Keeping records
- Additional guidance and advice
- Choose the right location
- Managing the sward
- Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
- Biodiversity
- Further information
How much will be paid
£151 per hectare (ha)
Where to use this option
Only on:
- permanent grassland outside severely disadvantaged areas (SDAs) and below the moorland line
This option can only be used if one or more of the following criteria are met.
- The grassland qualifies as semi-improved (see Permanent grassland options eligibility assessment form)
- To help the sustainable management and buffering of Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) or priority habitats
- To maintain grassland to conserve species of national or regional importance, or protect historic or archaeological features
- When in-field scrub cover is less than 1% and the option will be used in target areas for ground-nesting wading birds
- As part of the Wild Pollinator and Farm Wildlife Package
- On parcels adjacent to a permanent watercourse
Where this option cannot be used
- Part parcel (except when located with GS1)
Features that can be included in this option
The following features can be included if they are part of the land, even if they are ineligible for the Basic Payment Scheme (BPS).
- Ditches, dykes, drains, rivers, streams that are less than 4m wide for the majority of their length in the parcel
- Temporary water
- Permanent water up to 0.1ha
- Natural unsurfaced roads, tracks, paths and bridleways, as long as the requirements can still be met
- Bracken
- Areas of scree, rock outcrops and boulders - each area can cover up to 0.1ha
- Grazed woodland and scrub that allows livestock access and has grass underneath
These options and supplements can be located in the same area as this option.
How this option will benefit the environment
This will be grassland that contains some flowering grasses and wild flowers, and a variety of vegetation heights. This will provide nectar and shelter for invertebrates and an increased food supply for birds.
Aims
If you’re selected for a site visit, we will check that delivery of the aims is being met and the prohibited activities have not been carried out. This will ensure the environmental benefits are being delivered.
During the spring and early summer, the grassland will have a good cover of flowering grass species and wildflower species, and may also contain scattered areas of scrub and/or rushes. Grazing or cutting will ensure a variety of plant heights. Bare ground will be very limited.
By autumn, the sward will vary in height with tussocks of grass. Some grasses and wildflowers will be allowed to go to seed.
Any archaeological or historic features will be protected under a grass cover, with no increase in scrub cover, no bare ground present, and no damage incurred due to machinery use.
Prohibited activities
To achieve the aims and deliver the environmental benefits across the whole parcel, do not carry out any of the following activities:
Recommended management
To assist you in achieving the aims and deliver the environmental benefits for this option, we recommend that you use best practice.
We recommend that you:
- graze or cut for hay or silage
- remove any cuttings
- maintain a sward with a range of heights during the growing season to ensure that at least 20% is less than 7cm and 20% is more than 7cm. No height variation needs to be maintained when the field is closed up for a cut of hay or silage.
- maintain soil pH above 5.4 by liming, if necessary to promote a range of grasses and wild flowers, but not if the target is to maintain acid grassland.
- graze or cut areas of dense rush growth so that stands of soft or hard rush cover 20% or less of the parcel area and are less than 20cm high by 30 September
- where scrub cover is less than 5%, keep areas of well-established scrub in separate small patches, lines and occasional individual bushes across the site
- where scrub cover is equal to or above 5%, maintain between 5% and 10% scrub cover over the parcel
- prevent additional scrub encroachment on historic or archaeological features
- check for breeding birds before operating machinery or carrying out other activities which may disturb breeding birds or damage their nests. The breeding season tends to run from mid-March until mid-July, but it can start earlier and finish later, depending on the species and the weather.
You should not:
- allow bare ground to cover more than 5% of the option area, and only in the form of small, well-distributed areas
- allow more than 5 square metres of localised patches of bare ground around rabbit warrens by year 2
- top more than 50% of the total area in any one year
- from the start of October to end of July, top except in patches to control injurious weeds and invasive non-native species
Keeping records
Where there’s uncertainty about whether or not the aims of the options have been delivered, we will take into account any records or evidence you may have kept to demonstrate delivery of the aims of the option. This will include any steps you’ve taken to follow the recommended management set out above. It’s your responsibility to keep such records if you want to rely on these to support your claim.
- receipted invoices, consents or permissions connected with the work
- field operations at the parcel level, including associated invoices
- a standard soil analysis carried out in the last 5 years. The rules for farmers and land managers to prevent water pollution already require farmers and land managers to carry out soil testing on cultivated agricultural land and such test results may be used to meet the record-keeping requirements for this option.
- any sites grazed will require a grazing activity record
- permanent grassland eligibility assessment form (You do not have to use this form. You can use your own document if it gives enough information to meet the requirements.)
- photographs of the management undertaken
Additional guidance and advice
The following advice is helpful, but they are not requirements for this item.
Choose the right location
Grassland which contains rare plant species is clearly valuable. It can still be valuable, and suited to this option, if it contains commoner species:
- legumes such as red clover, lesser trefoil and black medick
- herbs such as ribwort plantain and yarrow
- attractive wildflowers such as selfheal and germander speedwell
Low input grassland is most valuable when located alongside other important landscape features such as scrub and wetlands in a mosaic approach.
Grassland is also the best protection for historic and archaeological features, as long as plants with powerful roots like scrub or bracken do not take hold, and bare ground does not develop.
Managing the sward
The land will be much more valuable for insects, birds and other animals if it has a varied, patchy structure all year round, as detailed under the recommended management. It is much easier to achieve this structure by grazing with cattle than by grazing with sheep only, which may fail to achieve the varied sward height and structure that is required.
Grazing may be rotational or intermittent, but the stock should eat the sward down well during the grazing periods to avoid it becoming rank during the rest periods. Wet areas can be important sources of insect food and should be maintained where possible.
Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
This option can form part of an IPM approach to prevent the establishment of pests, weeds and diseases. If successful, appropriate and within proximity of cropped areas, these may limit the need for the use of Plant Protection Products and enhance wildlife and biodiversity on your holding. Read information on IPM at AHDB (Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board) Integrated Pest Management and LEAF (Linking Environment and Farming).
Biodiversity
This option has been identified as being beneficial for biodiversity. All Countryside Stewardship habitat creation, restoration and management options are of great significance for biodiversity recovery, as are the wide range of arable options in the scheme. Capital items and supplements can support this habitat work depending on the holding’s situation and potential.
The connectivity of habitats is also very important and habitat options should be linked wherever possible. Better connectivity will allow wildlife to move/colonise freely to access water, food, shelter and breeding habitat, and will allow natural communities of both animals and plants to adapt in response to environmental and climate change.
Further information
Read Countryside Stewardship: get funding to protect and improve the land you manage to find out more information about Mid Tier and Higher Tier including how to apply.
Published 2 April 2015
Last updated 20 September 2022 + show all updates
- 13 September 2022
Prohibited activities section updated
- 8 February 2022
New payment rate from 1 January 2022.
- 8 February 2022
Additional guidance and advice section updated - this option can form part of an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) approach to prevent the establishment of pests, weeds and diseases.
- 30 March 2021
'Air quality' added to Land use.
- 4 February 2021
Option updated for agreements starting 1 January 2022
- 28 July 2020
Same bullet as below also updated to standardise soil testing information.
- 21 July 2020
Under heading “Keeping records”, 3rd bullet about soil analysis corrected to remove “… including analysis of organic matter by loss on ignition.”
- 11 February 2020
The Requirements and Keeping records sections of this page have been updated
- 6 March 2017
Updated for 2017 applications.
- 26 May 2016
Added further detail about the laboratory soil analysis requirements. Removed 'Do not apply fertiliser or manure in years when the parcel is not cut for hay, haylage or silage' from Requirements section.
- 29 March 2016
Information updated for applications in 2016.
- 2 April 2015
First published.