Title: 10. Case studies 2: Re-wilding the lowlands
110. Case studies 2Re-wilding the lowlands
- Lecture outline
- Oostvaardersplassen, The Netherlands
- Wicken Fen
- Abbots Hall Farm
- Workshop Summary, QA and exam preparation
2Oostvaarderplassen
- Vision a more natural oostvaardersplassen
- managed as a 'near-natural' reserve a form of
management was selected in the 1989 Nature Policy
Plan - aims to
- facilitate natural processes as far as possible
and reduce human intervention to a minimum - free free-ranging, undisturbed herds of red deer,
Heck cattle and Konik horses - one of only a few areas in the Netherlands where
the lead is taken from nature, where there is no
human direction, and nature takes its course - can have as yet unknown - positive and negative -
effects in terms of natural processes and the
social behaviour of herbivores
3Oostvaardersplassen (contd)
- The site
- 5600ha (inc. 3600ha marshland, 2000ha
grasslands/roughs) 20km east of Amsterdam - integrated mosaic of 8 ecological types
including - very wet zone (reed beds)
- dry and wet grassland
- open water (shallow lakes/mudflats)
- spontaneously grown woodland (willow, etc.)
- similar ecological landscape to the primeval
marshes of the estuaries of the big rivers of
Europe - a landscape that use to be common along the river
banks and great deltas covering huge surface
areas and one which has almost completely
disappeared from western Europe
4Oostvaardersplassen (contd)
- Existing designations
- European Diploma of Protected Areas
- prestigious international award granted to
natural and semi-natural areas and landscapes of
special European importance for the preservation
of biological, geological and landscape diversity
- SAC and SPA
- part of the Natura2000 network
- Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality
Ecological Network (EHS)
5Oostvaardersplassen (contd)
- History
- 1968 Southern Flevoland polder was reclaimed from
the Ijsselmeer - provide an area for agriculture, urban
development and forestry - part of this polder was intended to be used as an
industrial zone - this area that now constitutes the original 3600
ha of marshland within the Oostvaardersplassen. - natural value of the area progressed very rapidly
and Oostvaardersdiep areadeveloped into a very
important wetland according to international
standards - wetlands and the fauna depends a great deal on
surrounding area to function properly so original
wetlands should be bordered by a dry area of
roughly the same size - Primitive breeds of large herbivores introduced
in 1984 including Konik horses and Heck cattle
(grazers) and red deer (browsers) to control and
direct succession
6Oostvaardersplassen (contd)
- Ethos
- give maximum scope to natural processes
- free-ranging primitive breeds with wild habits to
control natural succession - give nature room and let it grow
- give the floodplain back to the river
- contrary to whole Dutch tradition of
river/floodplain engineering! - freedom of access for people
- free recreation
- attractive landscape
7Oostvaardersplassen (contd)
- Scientific basis
- use of large herbivores to control and direct
succession - create a park-like landscape mosaic
- successional process
- mix of grass, scrub and trees
- scrub (e.g. Sloe) takes hold in grass and
prevents grazing - scrub protects young tree saplings (e.g. oak) and
allows them to grow - forest develops and shades out scrub
- tree dies to create new clearing in which grass
takes hold - back to 1.
8Oostvaardersplassen (contd)
- Problems and challenges
- lack of large carnivores
- possible problems for herbivore numbers?
- quickly reached carrying capacity but limits of
available forage have kept numbers within
carrying capacity through natural selection (use
of data from Africa as analogue) - animal welfare problems
- what do about old/injured animals?
- what do with carcasses? (need to bring back large
carrion e.g. Black Vulture) - fell foul of local vet laws (need to remove
carcasses) - requires change of mind set to see Konik and Heck
as wild animals
9Wicken Fen
- Vision to secure the future of Cambridgeshires
fenland wildlife and to re-establish lost
species - lowland fen largely drained land for agriculture
in C16th/C17th by Dutch engineers - Remaining fragments of old fen (alder carr, sedge
and reed swamp) - Wildlife-rich habitat though relying on pumps for
drainage
10Wicken Fen (contd)
- The site
- 195ha of former farmland owned by the National
Trust - 10km northeast of Cambridge
- part of Swaffam Internal Drainage Board
- natural grazing by Konik ponies and Highland
cattle
11Wicken Fen (contd)
- Existing designations
- National Nature Reserve under the Wildlife and
Countryside Act 1981. - Britains best recorded nature reserve
- Site of Special Scientific Interest under the
Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. - Special Area of Conservation under the EU
Habitats Directive. - Wetland protected under the international Ramsar
Convention
12Wicken Fen (contd)
- History
- October 2000 NT acquires Guinea Hall Farm (115
acres) - October 2001 NT buys Burwell Fen Farm for 1.7m
(supported by Heritage Lottery Fund) - 2003-date under negotiation to acquire another
500 acres - 100 year vision
- acquire up to 3700 ha. of farmland to the south
of Wicken Fen over the next 100 years thus
extending the wetland to provide new and exciting
benefits for people and wildlife - land is currently owned by around 120 individuals
and acquisitions can only proceed with their
approval - the National Trust has no powers of
compulsory purchase - envisaged that an access / recreation corridor
can be set up at the southern end of the reserve
to join the reserve to the centre of Cambridge
thus enabling the new area to become the 'green
lung' for the city
13Wicken Fen (contd)
- Ethos
- Putting wildlife back into the countryside on a
landscape scale - Integrating requirements of wildlife with the
needs of local people, economy and tourism
holistic approach benefits from biodiversity,
landscape and general environment
14Wicken Fen (contd)
- Scientific basis
- in order to secure the future of Cambridgeshire's
fenland flora and fauna and to make viable the
re-establishment of lost species, it will be
necessary to think beyond the bounds of the
existing tiny fragments of wetland - extending the boundaries of the Fen to make it
possible to maintain populations of fen flora and
fauna over a wider area so dissipating the risk
of individual species extinctions - making possible migration between populations
enabling the body of peat, which is the Fenlands
most precious resource, to begin to grow after
three centuries of loss
15Wicken Fen (contd)
- Problems and challenges
- complex drainage
- requiring engineering work to restore
- isolated nature of fen (island of wild among
farming landscape)
16Abbotts Hall Farm
- Vision We must rethink the way we look after
our coast. We have the vision of a more
sustainable coastline which is better for
wildlife and people. We have a great deal of
research and expertise in our partners and
Abbotts Hall Farm puts this in to practise so we
can all see the benefits and really understand
any of the practical difficulties John Hall,
Director Essex WT - managed coastal retreat in face of sea-level rise
- creation of new salt marsh wildlands
17Abbotts Hall Farm (contd)
- The site
- Abbotts Hall Farm, Balckwater Estuary
- 350ha of arable and pasture land
- Example of managed coastal retreat
- Maintain sea defences for farmland in coastal
areas at increasing cost in face of sea-level
rise or breach defences and let sea back in to
create new salt marsh?
18Abbotts Hall Farm (contd)
- Existing designations
- winner of the 2005 RSPB/CIWEM Living Wetlands
Award - In Balckwater Estuary SSSI
- SPA
- candidate marine SAC
19Abbotts Hall Farm (contd)
- History
- bought by Essex WT in 2000
- is being managed as a viable farm but with
emphasis on improving the conditions for wildlife - part of this work includes a 'managed
realignment' over 200 acres (84ha) of former
farmland where breaches in the sea wall took
place (November 2002) - rest of farm managed for extensive/light grazing
- creating 115ha of transitional and intertidal
saltmarsh and mudflat. The proposed sequence of
habitat restoration on the site is - new mudflat/saltmarsh
- new coastal grassland
- new saline lagoon
- new reedbed
20Abbotts Hall Farm (contd)
- Ethos
- This scheme solves in one go the problem of
decreasing space for wildlife, recreation and
flood waters. It is an excellent example of how
consultation, imagination and environmental
objectives can work together for biodiversity and
the public interest.
21Abbotts Hall Farm (contd)
- Scientific basis
- Managed realignment as one of several 'soft'
engineering options which may reduce the costs of
coastal defence (in this case in low-lying areas) - provide a more 'natural' response to the problem
of rising sea levels and at the same time deliver
environmental, specifically nature conservation,
benefits
22Abbotts Hall Farm (contd)
- Problems and challenges
- generally acceptable where the area of land
behind the sea wall is already impoverished from
a nature conservation point of view - difficulties will arise where the land has a high
value, possibly as lagoonal or more likely
traditional coastal grazing marsh. In these
circumstances consideration will need to be given
to creating new coastal wet grassland from arable
or other intensively used agricultural land, if
the full sequence of habitats is to be
re-created. - managed realignment schemes will be subject to a
number of consents and licenses governed by EA
23Reading
- Colston, A. (1997) Conserving wildlife in a black
hole. ECOS 18(1), 61-67. - Pethick, J.S. (2002) Esturarine and tidal wetland
restoration in the United Kingdom policy versus
practice. Restoration Ecology, 10, 431-437. - Taylor, P. (2005) Beyond Conservation a wildland
strategy. Earthscan. Chapter 5. - http//oostvaardersplassen.biofaan.nl/scientificcd
/content.html - http//www.rlg.nl/english/publications/reports/058
a.html - http//www.wicken.org.uk/100y_scoping.htm
- http//www.guardian.co.uk/life/feature/story/0,130
26,975224,00.html - http//www.rspb.org.uk/policy/waterwetlands/living
wetlands/2005winner.asp - http//www.english-nature.org.uk/livingwiththesea/
24Workshop
- Summary of module
- FAQs
- Exam