Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Dig a pond and help to save the wildlife

- EMILY BEAMENT countrysid­e@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

DIGGING ponds in the countrysid­e can deliver “unpreceden­ted” gains for nature, experts said after a study showed they significan­tly boosted rare plants.

A nine-year project found that creating just 20 clean water ponds across 10 square kilometres (four square miles) of farmland increased the number of wetland plant species by more than a quarter (26 per cent).

The number of regionally rare plants almost trebled, with an increase of 181 per cent, while species that had gone extinct in the local area returned, the research found. The study, published recently in the journal Biological Conservati­on, tested a range of measures for improving freshwater habitat and wildlife in the countrysid­e in three catchment areas in Leicesters­hire.

These included putting woody debris in streams, damming up ditches to create pools that slowed run-off and building intercepti­on ponds to filter out nutrients and other pollutants.

The project also created clean water ponds, focusing on digging tive than the other measures tested out.

They were also one of the cheapest interventi­ons, costing just £1,500£2,000 each to dig, and helped bring back rare species such as marsh arrowgrass, bristle club-rush and mare’s tail.

Lead author Penny Williams, from Freshwater Habitats Trust, said: “The gains we saw are unpreceden­ted for freshwater and are, by a long way, the largest recorded improvemen­ts in freshwater diversity seen from adding land management measures to countrysid­e landscapes. Our previous work had already shown that ponds were a secret treasure in the British countrysid­e – with a value out of proportion to their tiny size – however the scale of benefits from adding new ponds took all of us by surprise.”

Dr Jeremy Biggs, Freshwater Habitats Trust director, said the study proved it was possible to increase freshwater diversity significan­tly at a regional scale.

“Climate change will wreak even more havoc in future years and up to now we have found very few ways to combat losses and make the countrysid­e more resilient,” he added.

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