Thursday, 8 October 2020

COUNCIL KEEN TO MAKE WETLAND SITE MORE ATTRACTIVE TO WADERS AND WILDFOWL


Target species for Cress Marsh include spoonbill and lapwing

A BUSY winter is ahead at Cress Marsh - the Stallingborough bird reserve created by North East Lincolnshire Council to provide a home for  waders and wildfowl likely to be displaced by future industrial development in the area.

NELC and its regeneration partner, Engie, are keen to make the site  more attractive  to birds such as Spoonbills, Little Egrets, Cormorants, Redshank, Golden Plover, Curlew and Lapwing. 

To this end, tall vegetation is being  cleared in order to enhance the habitat.

Says NELC's ecology technician, Siân Niblo: “Predators can hide in tall grass, and the birds prefer wide open space for roosting, so we have all been pitching in to clear vegetation  from the lagoon at the centre of the site. 

"This has to be done by hand and is no easy task, but it is important to make the ground more appealing for our feathering guests.” 

Sian is currently compiling a log of birds that have been recorded at the site, and, to date, she has 111 different species on her list.

The birds share Cress Marsh with butterflies, dragonflies, deer, foxes  and a herd of cattle which will be there until next month.

Meanwhile, the reserve - known as a mitigation site - has been shortlisted for a national award,  the Innovation in Property and Asset Management category of the local government achievement awards.

the site  was developed after consultation with Natural England, the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust, the RSPB, the Humber Nature Partnership, the Environment Agency and landowners.

The chief feature is a large central lagoon, which feeds seven more water-filled ‘cells’ via pipework infrastructure.                                  


Rosebay willow herb and other invasive plants are being removed by hand

                                               

The bird hide that overlooks the main lagoon

                                          

Cress Marsh is open to birds - but not to the public

The main lagoon - not too many birds so far but the council hopes to make it more bird-attractive

The Wryneck says: Cress Marsh was an excellent initiative, but ornithologists monitoring the site have been underwhelmed by both the quantity and variety of species recorded. Benchmarked against the RSPB's Frampton Marsh reserve, near Boston, Cress Marsh performs poorly. One factor could be the overhead power cables which pose an obvious collision threat to birds, particularly after dark. It seems an odd oversight that this issue seems to have been disregarded by the various wildlife organisations which were consulted during the planning stage.



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