Case study:LIFE Dee River

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Project overview

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Status In progress
Project web site http://naturalresources.wales/LIFEDeeRiver?lang=en
Themes Fisheries, Habitat and biodiversity, Hydromorphology, Land use management - agriculture, Monitoring
Country Wales
Main contact forename Josh
Main contact surname Robins
Main contact user ID User:JoshRRC
Contact organisation Natural Resources Wales
Contact organisation web site
Partner organisations Environment Agency, European Union (EU), River Restoration Centre, Snowdonia National Park Authority, Welsh Water, Welsh Government
Parent multi-site project
This is a parent project
encompassing the following
projects
No
River Dee

Project summary

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LIFE Dee River is a £6.8m project to transform the River Dee and its catchment by restoring the river and its surroundings back to their natural state. This will bring many benefits to the environment, most notably improving the numbers of salmon, lamprey and freshwater pearl mussels to help them become more sustainable in future.

The Dee is the largest river in North Wales with a catchment area of more than 1,800 km². It is one of the most highly regulated rivers in Europe, and along with Llyn Tegid it has been designated as a Special Area of Conservation (SAC).

From its headwaters in the uplands of Eryri (Snowdonia), the Dee descends via Llyn Tegid, the largest natural lake in Wales. After flowing through a broad valley to Corwen, it tumbles eastwards through the spectacular Vale of Llangollen, under the famous Pontcysyllte Aqueduct World Heritage Site, before breaching the Welsh foothills near Bangor-on-Dee, and meandering northwards through the Cheshire plain to its tidal limit just below Chester.

The main uses of the River Dee are farming, predominantly cattle and sheep grazing; water abstraction for water supply for 2.5m people; tourism including recreational angling, canoeing and navigation; and nature conservation.

The project actions include:

  • removing the constraints to fish migration and wider ecological connectivity
  • restoring or improving natural riverine physical processes, features and habitats in at least 55 km of river
  • improving agricultural and forestry land management practices to reduce the input of nutrients and sediment entering the SAC
  • initiating conservation management for the critically-endangered freshwater pearl mussel
  • establishing and building long-term positive relationships with key stakeholders during and beyond the life of the project

Monitoring surveys and results

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Lessons learnt

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Catchment and subcatchment



Site

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Project background

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Monitoring



Reasons for river restoration

Mitigation of a pressure
Hydromorphology
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Measures

Structural measures
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Floodplain / River corridor
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Monitoring

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Monitoring documents



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Additional links and references

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Supplementary Information

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