The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

£90,000 to improve life along length of riverbank

Habitat: Help for salmon and otters

- BY KAITLIN EASTON

A north-east group’s efforts to restore river habitats has received financial support from the Scottish Government.

The Dee District Salmon Fishery Board will use the £90,000 to create a better environmen­t for Atlantic salmon, freshwater pearl mussels and otters on the River Dee.

The money will be invested directly in restoratio­n work along the Garbh Allt and Upper River Muick as part of the catchment-wide Dee Garbh Allt Habitat Project.

Artificial embankment­s will be removed from Garbh Allt as backwater channels are reconnecte­d to restore natural processes.

On the upper reaches of the River Muick, flooding impact will be reduced and channel diversity increased by reintroduc­ing woody structures to create habitat for a range of aquatic species.

Flora Grigor-Taylor, habitat adviser for the Dee District Salmon Fishery Board, said: “Many of our rivers have become degraded over time and now lack variety both within the channel and along riverbanks.

“This in turn impacts negatively on the wildlife it is able to support, including our wild Atlantic salmon, freshwater pearl mussel and otter, which all benefit from a diverse river structure.

“Downstream of the project sites, these catchment improvemen­ts will bring natural flood management benefits to communitie­s and the local area.”

The Garbh Allt and Muick River Restoratio­n Project is one of 16 successful schemes across Scotland to receive money in the second round of the £4 million Biodiversi­ty Challenge Fund.

Scotland Natural Heritage chief executive Francesca Osowska said: “As lockdown conditions lift, green recovery projects like the Biodiversi­ty Challenge Fund put nature, and nature-based solutions, at the heart of rebuilding our economy.

“But it’s not just about conservati­on – enriching our nature is also part of the solution to the climate emergency too.

“People know that climate change is a big issue but not as many know that biodiversi­ty loss is also a global and generation­al threat to human wellbeing.

“Nature is at the heart of what we do, and we will continue to deliver the transforma­tional change needed to bring a nature-rich, sustainabl­e and more economical­ly secure future for Scotland.”

 ?? Photograph by Paul Glendell ?? BIODIVERSI­TY: The grant will help to restore crucial wildlife habitats on the Dee.
Photograph by Paul Glendell BIODIVERSI­TY: The grant will help to restore crucial wildlife habitats on the Dee.

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