We complete invertebrate surveys across Derbyshire, including Derby, Chesterfield, High Peak, Derbyshire Dales, Matlock, Ashbourne, Amber Valley, North East Derbyshire, South Derbyshire, Erewash, and the Peak District.
Need planning-ready invertebrate surveys in Derbyshire?
We provide targeted surveys for priority species and habitats, ensuring our reports enable you to achieve planning permission.
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Derbyshire’s varied landscape of limestone dales, upland meadows, quarries, river valleys, pastureland and parkland estates supports a wide range of invertebrate species.
An invertebrate survey is an assessment of an area to identify which invertebrate species are present. Experts search, observe, and sample habitats over time to determine species diversity, abundance, and conservation importance. The results help ensure that development or land-use changes do not harm invertebrate wildlife and comply with planning and environmental regulations.
You may need an invertebrate survey if your project involves:
A simple postcode check confirms whether your LPA is likely to request invertebrate evidence.
We complete invertebrate surveys across Derbyshire, including Derby, Chesterfield, High Peak, Derbyshire Dales, Matlock, Ashbourne, Amber Valley, North East Derbyshire, South Derbyshire, Erewash, and the Peak District.
In Derbyshire, planning authorities may require invertebrate survey evidence where suitable habitat is present to ensure development complies with the Wildlife & Countryside Act 1981 and national planning policy. Without early, proportionate survey work, planning applications can be delayed due to validation queries, additional conditions, or seasonal restrictions linked to key invertebrate activity periods. These delays can disrupt project programmes and may result in avoidable redesign, highlighting the importance of early, targeted invertebrate assessments.
Our specialist ecology team carries out an invertebrate surveys to assess species presence, habitat use, and any potential risks. You receive a clear, LPA-ready report outlining practical mitigation and timing recommendations, helping your project remain compliant with wildlife legislation and progress without delay.
We provide a clear, proportionate, practical approach for projects in Derbyshire. This includes:
We keep everything proportionate and focused on what planning actually needs.
Send your site details and programme. We confirm the correct level of survey.
Walkovers or multi-visit surveys depending on your sites potential.
Planning-ready reports with impact assessment, mitigation options and timelines for site teams.
Only if needed. PEA, EIA, and Protected Species surveys
Need an Invertebrate Survey in Derbyshire? Let’s confirm your site’s requirements and keep your project on track.
An invertebrate survey may be required where development could affect habitats that support important insect populations. In Derbyshire, habitats such as limestone grassland, moorland edges, ancient woodland, wetlands, rivers, mature hedgerows and brownfield land can all provide valuable habitat for notable invertebrate species. Surveying these habitats early helps identify ecological constraints before planning decisions are made.
The purpose of an invertebrate survey is to determine whether a site supports significant insect populations that could be affected by development. The findings allow Local Planning Authorities to assess the ecological importance of the site and decide whether habitat protection, mitigation or enhancement measures should be incorporated into the proposed scheme.
No. Although some invertebrates receive legal protection, surveys also assess species of conservation importance and invertebrate communities that indicate high quality habitats. Understanding the overall ecological value of a site helps ensure planning decisions consider biodiversity as a whole, rather than focusing solely on protected species.
Habitats frequently associated with important invertebrate populations include species rich limestone grassland, upland heath, woodland clearings, wetlands, ponds, river corridors, flower rich meadows, mature trees and naturally regenerated brownfield sites. Each habitat is assessed individually based on its condition, diversity and ecological connectivity.
Every site is different, so ecologists select survey methods based on the habitats present, the time of year and the species most likely to occur. Techniques may include habitat assessments, sweep netting, aerial netting, vegetation beating, pitfall trapping and direct observation to produce a comprehensive ecological assessment.
It is best to arrange an invertebrate survey as soon as ecological requirements are identified. Most surveys are undertaken between April and September, when insects are active, but the optimum timing depends on the species likely to be present. Early booking helps avoid delays if seasonal survey windows are limited.
Yes. Survey findings often help shape development layouts by identifying valuable habitats that should be retained or enhanced. This can lead to practical design improvements, such as protecting existing grassland, creating wildlife corridors or incorporating habitat features that support Biodiversity Net Gain objectives.
Ecological requirements vary depending on the Local Planning Authority responsible for your application. Planning guidance can be found through Derbyshire County Council:
District and borough councils across Derbyshire may also require ecological surveys where development could affect important habitats or species.
Your ecological report will explain the habitats surveyed, survey methodology, species identified, the ecological importance of the site and any recommendations required to support planning. Where appropriate, the report will also include mitigation, compensation or habitat enhancement measures to assist the planning process.
ProHort provides professional invertebrate surveys throughout Derbyshire for planning applications, infrastructure projects and land development. Our experienced ecologists deliver robust, planning compliant reports that help homeowners, developers, architects and planning consultants understand ecological constraints and keep projects progressing efficiently.