Case study:Watercress Farm Rewetting Project: Difference between revisions
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{{Case study status | {{Case study status | ||
|Approval status= | |Approval status=Approved | ||
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{{Location | {{Location | ||
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|Partner organisations=Belmont Estate | |Partner organisations=Belmont Estate | ||
|Multi-site=No | |Multi-site=No | ||
|Project picture= | |Project picture=Wetlands-Project-During-Construction-in-July-23-photo-Belmont-Estate.jpeg | ||
|Picture description=River channel at Belmont Estate | |Picture description=River channel at Belmont Estate | ||
|Project summary=At Watercress Farm, which lies on the very northern edge of the Somerset Levels, Ecosulis worked with Belmont Estate on the creation of a new wetland. The intention was to enable the river to reclaim its former floodplain, creating a new, more sinuous path, which will deliver benefits for both people and nature. The project was designed to trap runoff sediment, pollutants and nutrients, while this degraded former arable field develops into a biodiverse wetland, supporting abundant wildlife. | |Project summary=At Watercress Farm, which lies on the very northern edge of the Somerset Levels, Ecosulis worked with Belmont Estate on the creation of a new wetland. The intention was to enable the river to reclaim its former floodplain, creating a new, more sinuous path, which will deliver benefits for both people and nature. The project was designed to trap runoff sediment, pollutants and nutrients, while this degraded former arable field develops into a biodiverse wetland, supporting abundant wildlife. | ||
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|File name=Breaking through the channel at Belmont Estate.jpeg | |File name=Breaking through the channel at Belmont Estate.jpeg | ||
|Caption=Break through the channel at Belmont Estate | |Caption=Break through the channel at Belmont Estate | ||
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|Caption=East Pond | |||
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{{Case study subcatchment}} | {{Case study subcatchment | ||
|Subcatchment=Land Yeo Channel | |||
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|Works started=2023/09/29 | |Works started=2023/09/29 | ||
|Works completed=2023/09/29 | |Works completed=2023/09/29 | ||
|Project completed=2023/09/29 | |||
|Works and supervision Lead organisation=ecosulis | |Works and supervision Lead organisation=ecosulis | ||
|Works and supervision Other contact forename=Nick | |Works and supervision Other contact forename=Nick | ||
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{{Motivations | {{Motivations | ||
|Hydromorphological quality elements=Improve the hydro morphology and biodiversity of the Land Yeo River. | |Specific mitigation=Aggregate/mineral extraction | ||
|Hydromorphological quality elements=Improve the hydro morphology and biodiversity of the Land Yeo River. Maximize the area of semi-permanent and ephemeral water, Re-connect the flood plain at the Watercress Farm landholding. | |||
|Biological quality elements=The extension of this biodiverse regional patchwork of nature reserves, ditches, rivers and streams supporting populations of Bittern and Water Vole. The network of scrapes and river bends will soon be rich in plant and animal life, from amphibians to invertebrates, fish to mammals. | |||
|Physico-chemical quality elements=Creating new wetland habitats improves our climate resilience and helps to restore the river system by trapping nutrients and pollutants in adjacent scrapes. The new river slows the flow of water, developing a more structured, naturalistic river system, while rewetting adjacent soils, which should improve their carbon storage capacity. | |||
|Other motivation=Extensive farming and industrial draining around the Land Yeo River. And designed to enable the land to act as a functioning flood plain, whilst restoring natural water flow and creating a haven for birds, pollinators and plants | |Other motivation=Extensive farming and industrial draining around the Land Yeo River. And designed to enable the land to act as a functioning flood plain, whilst restoring natural water flow and creating a haven for birds, pollinators and plants | ||
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|Link=ecosulis.co.uk/case-studies/river-restoration-on-the-belmont-estate/ | |||
|Description=Belmont Case Study | |||
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{{Supplementary Information}} | {{Supplementary Information}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 10:53, 26 February 2024
Project overview
Status | Complete |
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Project web site | |
Themes | Environmental flows and water resources, Flood risk management, Habitat and biodiversity, Land use management - agriculture, Social benefits, Water quality |
Country | England |
Main contact forename | Kate |
Main contact surname | Miller |
Main contact user ID | User:kate.miller |
Contact organisation | Ecosulis |
Contact organisation web site | http://ecosulis.co.uk |
Partner organisations | Belmont Estate |
Parent multi-site project | |
This is a parent project encompassing the following projects |
No |
Project summary
At Watercress Farm, which lies on the very northern edge of the Somerset Levels, Ecosulis worked with Belmont Estate on the creation of a new wetland. The intention was to enable the river to reclaim its former floodplain, creating a new, more sinuous path, which will deliver benefits for both people and nature. The project was designed to trap runoff sediment, pollutants and nutrients, while this degraded former arable field develops into a biodiverse wetland, supporting abundant wildlife.
Our main objectives for the Watercress Wetland creation project were to re-connect the flood plain at the Watercress Farm landholding, maximize the area of semi-permanent and ephemeral water and improve the hydro morphology and biodiversity of the Land Yeo River.
The project was set out to achieve these objectives through creation of a new 400m wetland stream and 1.74hectares of wetland scrapes, blocking existing straight/steep sided ditches, the creation of numerous ephemeral scrapes of varying sizes and shapes, and the creation of numerous areas of permanent water, either within a scrape or as backwater ponds with shallow gradients.
Between June and September 2023, Ecosulis undertook extensive transformative works, focusing on the Land Yeo River channel and its surroundings. The west side of Watercress Wood saw the elevation of water levels in the existing channel, with the creation of four clay and gravel riffle impoundments, diverting flows into a newly designed 400m optimized wetland stream. This stream, boasting various river restoration techniques, now functions as the primary channel, bypassing the re-purposed longitudinal wetland ponds.
Ten wetland scrapes, excavated into arable land on both banks of the wetland stream, offer over 7,800m² of habitat to the Land Yeo River catchment. These features, connected to the wetland stream, adjust water levels based on flow conditions. Gravels extracted on-site were used for bed dressing, bed raising, and gravel riffle installations.
Wetland scrapes upstream of Watercress Wood, both within and outside the floodplain, intercept agricultural runoff, fostering approximately 18,000m² of vital wet meadow habitat. Field ditches have been strategically plugged to maximise marshy wet meadow habitat. Spoil from wetland excavation formed butterfly banks and bunds, enhancing breeding habitat for insects and reptiles across 13,000m².
Land drains were intentionally broken or blocked to retain water on-site, mitigating runoff into the Land Yeo River and neighbouring areas. This comprehensive approach showcases a commitment to environmental restoration, providing diverse habitats while addressing water management and runoff concerns within the catchment.
Monitoring surveys and results
The site will be monitored by Belmont’s ecology volunteer group and will act as the backdrop to their free, nature-based education programme. We will also be working alongside Belmont to continue to capture and record the impacts of site to showcase effective partnership working, to deliver long-term benefits for the local area and beyond.
During the delivery of the project, we conducted daily reporting and assessments of our works and findings, to ensure we were continuing to align with the project objectives and meeting the requirements to protect and restore local biodiversity. This included ECoWs reports, fuel logs, vehicle and machine checks, a desk -based study and contamination report, alongside daily walk-throughs to identify any potential risks and issues.
Lessons learnt
Image gallery
Catchment and subcatchmentSelect a catchment/subcatchment
Catchment
Subcatchment
Site
Project background
Cost for project phases
Reasons for river restoration
Measures
MonitoringHydromorphological quality elements
Biological quality elements
Physico-chemical quality elements
Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic
Monitoring documents
Additional documents and videos
Additional links and references
Supplementary InformationEdit Supplementary Information
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