England's Fens are habitat for rare wildlife and biodiversity
Fens are rare wildlife 'hotspot'
Ouse Washes is a Special Area of Conservation
The Fens are home to 25% of Britain's rarest wildlife and 13 globally rare species, according to a new report.
Researchers from the University of East Anglia studied over one million
records collected by scientists and amateur enthusiasts that date back to 1670.
The Fens Biodiversity Audit details evidence of 13,474 species of plants,
insects, birds, fish and mammals.
The area covered 3,800 km sq, spanning the Fenlands of Norfolk, Suffolk,
Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire.
Christopher Panter, an ecologist from the school of Environmental Sciences at
the University of East Anglia and one of the authors of the audit, commented:
"One of the most surprising things was that, despite it being a very large area,
most of the area was previously unrecorded."
Fantastic fens
Predatory Great Raft Spider - East Anglica.
Data was collected from well-known fen sites such as
Chippenham, Woodwalton and Wicken Fens, as well as less-known sites such as
Holme, Baston and Thurlby Fens, and gravel pits such as Dogsthorpe Star Pit.
Results show that the area is of global importance. The Fens are home to 13
species that are included on the International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN) Red List of threatened species.
The European eel is listed as critically endangered, while the white-clawed
crayfish is currently listed as endangered.
Other threatened species include black-tailed godwits, otters, Barbastelle
bats and Desmoulin's whorl snail.
Researchers also found 82 species that are of significance to the area.
Mr Panter said, "Of the 82 species, we identified around half for which the
Fens are a 'primary stronghold'. We quantified this as where 50% or more of a
species occur in the area".
The white-clawed crayfish is classed as endangered on the IUCN Red List.
Within this number are a further 20 species that are found virtually nowhere
elsewhere in the UK, such as the fen ragwort and a subspecies of the heath
dog-violet, plus the Rosser's sac spider, feather-winged beetles, a
snail-killing fly Anticheta obviliosa and the Cambridge groundling
moth.
Of the total species recorded, researchers found 30 species of rare
hoverflies and 92 rare water beetles.
But the study highlights that much of the Fens' important biodiversity has
been lost. Mr Panter explained, "100 species of birds, bees and butterflies have
been lost from the area since 1670 - the period that the audit covers".
This number includes 30 flowering plants, 10 beetles, 17 moths and six
butterflies that are absent from the Fens due to local or UK extinction.
A total of 504 rare species have not been recorded in the last 25 years.
Fen ragwort is exclusive to the area.
Researchers identified which specific wetland habitats were most favoured by
wildlife in the Fens.
Mr Panter said, "This was mainly bright, well-vegetated areas, but reed beds
with tall vegetation, dead herbaceous stems and detritus seemed to be very
important".
The audit also shows how management could be improved for wildlife and where
new management techniques could be introduced.
"This study gives an understanding of the ecological requirements of hundreds
of rare species so that conservation can be cost-effective," said Mr Panter.
Work is now under way to restore the wetland complex at both existing and new
sites.
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