Case study:Barking Creekmouth: Difference between revisions

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• Interpretation boards installed with the aid of Lee Rivers Trust and local school children helped design the boards
• Interpretation boards installed with the aid of Lee Rivers Trust and local school children helped design the boards
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Revision as of 15:47, 29 August 2012

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Location: 51° 30' 59.87" N, 0° 5' 48.53" E
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Project overview

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Status Complete
Project web site
Themes Fisheries, Habitat and biodiversity, Social benefits
Country England
Main contact forename Scarr
Main contact surname Toni
Main contact user ID
Contact organisation Environment Agency
Contact organisation web site http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk
Partner organisations
Parent multi-site project

Case_study:Lower River Roding Regeneration Project

This is a parent project
encompassing the following
projects
No
during construction

Project summary

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Previous site use/issues

• underused and undervalued area of greenspace, owned by the Environment Agency, adjacent to the Barking Barrier.

• The terrestrial habitat consisted of species poor grassland with patches of scrub and Japanese knotweed. Areas which would have supported saltmarsh species were encased in riprap covered in bitumen and had be historically land raised.

• The foreshore in this area is important for overwintering birds such as teal, shelduck, tufted duck, wigeon, gadwell, shoveler, pintail, little grebe. Common whitethroat, sandmartins and linnet has been seen breeding in the area a pair of oyster catchers were also recorded breeding in 2000. Saltmarsh and mudflat UK BAP habitat is very important for these types of fauna and also flora.

• Barking Creek is recognised as a valuable feeding and refuge area for a variety of fish species, flounder, eel, smelt, sea bass in both their adults and juveniles life stages. These utilise the full range of sub, intertidal and saltmarsh habitats for foraging and refuge.

• There was limited amenity use, lack of seating areas, views from site obstructed by flood defences and no wheelchair access to site.

• Failing flood defences.

Enhancements • Breach of existing defence and creation of tidal backwater providing increased flood storage and wildlife habitat. • The backwater area and new reedbeds represent a new, highly valuable feeding and refuge area for fish. Recent studies have shown that both juvenile and adult fish move into these areas as soon as they are inundated. They feed extensively on the invertebrates present within the reedbeds. Such habitats are increasingly thought to significantly enhance the juvenile survival of commercially important fish such as bass. The Thames Estuary is now recognised as an important nursery area for this species.

• Retreat and renewal of flood defences to provide current standards of flood risk allowing for changes due to climate change.

• New site entrance and access route through site.

• Creation of new seating and viewing areas.

• Interpretation boards installed with the aid of Lee Rivers Trust and local school children helped design the boards

Monitoring surveys and results

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Catchment and subcatchment

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Subcatchment:Barking Creek


Site

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Project background

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Reasons for river restoration

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Measures

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Monitoring

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