Case study:Morden Hall Park Water Vole Habitat Enhancement
This case study is pending approval by a RiverWiki administrator.
Project overview
| Status | Complete |
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| Project web site | |
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| Country | England |
| Main contact forename | Chris |
| Main contact surname | Strachan |
| Main contact user ID | |
| Contact organisation | Environment Agency |
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| This is a parent project encompassing the following projects |
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Project summary
The objective is to create natural banks that water voles can occupy through the removal of wooden toe-boarding.
Toe-boarding was removed from 500m of bank. Where there was a liklihood of bank collapse, on bends and around small islands, the boards were either left or a sympathetic replacement such as coir matting was used. Morden Hall Park is a former deer park currently owned by the National Trust. The river Wandle and several man-made channels flow through the park, the banks of which are protected by wooden toe-boarding. Water voles are currently absent on the river and there are future plans to re-introduce them at this site.
The project is part of the London Water Vole Project.
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Catchment and subcatchment
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Supplementary InformationEdit Supplementary Information
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