New wetland habitat thriving on Buckinghamshire’s River Thame

The Environment Agency helped fund Eythrope Wetland, transforming a meadow into home for 122 bird species, including teal, lapwing and ringed plover.

A combined 32 hectares of formerly low-biodiversity floodplain have been transformed thanks to the creation of new wetlands alongside the river – firstly on land at Eythrope owned and managed by the Waddesdon Estate, and followed by Manor Farm in Chearsley.

A grant approaching £400,000 from the Environment Agency helped transform a quiet meadow into a vast wildlife habitat.

With a Water Environment Grant of £360,450 from the Environment Agency, and expertise from the Freshwater Habitats Trust, at the Eythrope site, the River Thame Conservation Trust took on its first wetland and backwater construction project – and the biggest it had ever commissioned.

 

As well as a backwater – a large pond connected to the river, where young fish can safely grow to maturity – the project also created a variety of shapes and sizes of pools and scrapes – dips in the ground that can fill with water. All these features encourage species of plants, insects and animals that thrive in wetland habitats.

The success of the project is evident in the wide range of species recorded at the site since its transformation. Regular surveys record excellent fish and bird populations, with 122 different species of bird using the wetland habitat in 2021, including teal, lapwing and ringed plover, among many others.

A key habitat for wetland birds, Eythrope Wetland is also an important stepping stone between two other wetland bird habitats in Buckinghamshire, near Aylesbury and Waterstock.

While the Environment Agency supports many partnership projects improving local water environments, the site is the first of its kind in the Thame catchment.

Environment Agency project manager Anita Appleby said:

“The Environment Agency and our partners hope that Eythrope Wetland will become a site to evidence what can be achieved on a formerly low-diversity floodplain.

“We also hope that the success of the project will lead to Eythrope Wetland receiving Local Wildlife Site designation in 2023.”

Hilary Phillips, senior project officer at the River Thame Conservation Trust, said:

“The Eythrope Wetland project, completed in 2020, was a major milestone for us as a small grassroots charity working for a river catchment with healthy fresh waters and wildlife. It was the largest floodplain restoration project we had ever taken on and was the first of its kind in the Thame catchment.

“We were able to transform a low-diversity 10-hectare meadow into a thriving mosaic of scrapes and pools to create a diverse wetland complex.”

Hannah Worker, senior project officer at the Freshwater Habitats Trust, said:

“Although the project represents a new and innovative approach to wetland creation, it’s actually quite a simple concept. We know that freshwater wildlife needs a variety of waterbodies, so by creating a complex of different clean water ponds and pools we can support a wider range of species.

“Through collaborative projects like this, we’re working with partners to build the Freshwater Network, a national network of wilder, cleaner, connected freshwaters to reverse the decline in freshwater biodiversity.”

The success of Eythrope Wetland inspired similar work that took place earlier this year at Manor Farm in Chearsley, where, again, a backwater was constructed alongside the River Thame, with scrapes and ponds, to create a wetland complex. While it is too early for the site to show results on the scale of Eythrope Wetland, it is hoped and expected that it will develop along similar lines.

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