![A harvest mouse climbing on cocksfoot grass](/media/4991/harvest-mouse-climbing-on-cocksfoot-grass-naturepl-01175818-ross-hoddinott.jpg?center=0.44705882352941179,0.3524229074889868&mode=crop&heightratio=0.5622047244094488188976377953&width=647&rnd=132091424600000000)
Credit: Ross Hoddinott / naturepl.com
Value to wildlife
Long grass species like cocksfoot are important for wildlife.
They are:
- food sources for caterpillars like the gatekeeper and meadow brown; while the seeds are eaten by finches and gamebirds
- pollen sources for pollinators such as honeybees which will favour cocksfoot pollen over that of many wild flowers
- habitats for wildlife: bumblebees build their nests in the long grass; carder bees nest in holes, hidden by the stalks; they are nesting sites for small mammals; and habitats for amphibians and reptiles.