Case study:Wellow & Cam Initiative

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Location: 51° 19' 24.94" N, 2° 22' 28.24" W
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Project overview

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Status In progress
Project web site
Themes Environmental flows and water resources, Fisheries, Habitat and biodiversity, Hydromorphology, Land use management - agriculture, Monitoring, Social benefits, Water quality
Country England
Main contact forename Simon
Main contact surname Hunter
Main contact user ID
Contact organisation Bristol Avon Rivers Trust
Contact organisation web site http://http://www.bristolavonriverstrust.org/
Partner organisations
This is a parent project
encompassing the following
projects
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Project summary

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On 2nd February 2013, a slurry incident along the Wellow Brook in Somerset caused a major fish kill and was reported by the Environment Agency as one of the worst pollution events in many years. The Wellow Brook has been designated a score of ‘Poor’ and the Cam Brook ‘Moderate’ in 2016 under the European Water Framework Directive (WFD).

From a small donation of £5,000 for the Enforcement Undertaking, BART has raised over £100,000 towards the project to date. BART has delivered the following:

Habitat assessments along the length of the Wellow and much of the Cam.

Mapped all barriers along the Wellow.

The removal of three boulder weirs that were impounding flows and smothering potential spawning substrate with sediment throughout ~8km reach.

Removal of 1 small weir and re-profiling of 2 boulder weirs in the lower Cam Brook

Pre-feasibility assessments for a large weir at the confluence of the Wellow Brook

Pre-feasibility assessments for a ford which is presenting a barrier to fish on the Wellow Brook

SNIFFER fish passage assessments on 3 weirs in the urban section of the Wellow

~20km of habitat improvements with LWD and coppicing

A successful partnership project with Midsomer Norton Town Council to improve a section of river which has now been turned into a Local Nature Reserve.

3 Riverfly monitors monitoring the Wellow on a monthly basis as well as several more BART Beacons

A pre-barrier removal electrofishing survey which we will aim to follow up with a further survey shortly to assess ongoing improvements in future years

The creation of a Friends of river group with Shoscombe Parish Council

Riparian fencing and buffer strip creation on the Cam Brook and Norton Brook

The installation of formalised cattle drinking areas to reduce poaching on the Cam Brook and Norton Brook

A programme of coppicing and LWD along a 2km reach of the Cam Brook

Strategic discussions with the Environment Agency about removing a redundant asset as a result of opening up the river to this point via BART’s work to date.

Engagement with over 250 local people, through river sessions, ‘Yellowfish’ antipollution projects and public talks.

Several litter picks, including a recent one where over 200 plastic bottles were removed and turned into a plastic fish which has attended many local events

A Challenges and Opportunities report outlining key issues and potential work-packages throughout the Wellow & Cam Brooks.

Monitoring surveys and results

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Further monitoring will be needed to deduce the level of improvements resulting from our works. However, as a start, BART note the following:

Electrofishing surveys at 5 sites along the Wellow Brook (pre-barrier removal and woody habitat installation)

Visibly improved flow diversity – levels dropped by 0.5 metres and new gravel bars and riffles exposed

Visibly reduced sedimentation of the riverbed in the weir removal project areas which will result in improved spawning potential in the coming years.

Local angling club feedback: “Mayflies absolutely off the chart at the moment, free rising trout and a squadron of ducklings in the background at the end of the clip. Heaven. The Wellow is having a super year @Bristol Avon Rivers Trust thanks for all the in-river improvements, they really seem to be having an impact!”

We have had a huge amount of positive feedback from our engagement sessions, including: “Thank you … it was a brilliant day. All the staff are now talking about taking their classes down to the river back and feeling more confident about the activity. The children learnt a lot about the creatures living in their local river and the parents thought it was a really well organised event.”

Lessons learnt

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Image gallery


Riffle establishing after weir removal.jpg
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Catchment and subcatchment



Site

Name
WFD water body codes
WFD (national) typology
WFD water body name
Pre-project morphology
Reference morphology
Desired post project morphology
Heavily modified water body
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Protected species present
Invasive species present
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Dominant hydrology
Dominant substrate
River corridor land use
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Project background

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Cost for project phases

Phase cost category cost exact (k€) Lead organisation Contact forename Contact surname
Investigation and design
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Post-project management and maintenance
Monitoring



Reasons for river restoration

Mitigation of a pressure
Hydromorphology
Biology
Physico-chemical
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Measures

Structural measures
Bank/bed modifications
Floodplain / River corridor
Planform / Channel pattern
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Non-structural measures
Management interventions
Social measures (incl. engagement)
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Monitoring

Hydromorphological quality elements

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Before measures After measures Qualitative Quantitative

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Any other monitoring, e.g. social, economic

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Monitoring documents



Additional documents and videos


Additional links and references

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Supplementary Information

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