2007 04 Newport Wetlands Centre - Sue Rice, Countryside Council for Wales
2014 11 tim mc-grath
1. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
2. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Background
•EA required to compensate for loss of internationally important intertidal habitat
•Steart peninsula identified as potential site large enough to deliver objective
•at 500ha it’s the largest wetland habitat creation scheme in the UK
•in Sept 2009 WWT successful in bid to manage site after works complete
•a site that demonstrates good practice and exemplar of wetland creation, climate adaptation and people engagement.
•integration into Project Team – advisory role on habitat design and visitor management
3. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Background
•2009: initial designs; extensive stakeholder consultation begins
•2010: preferred option presented to stakeholders
•2011: trail embankment built; EPS mitigation & archaeological work begins
•2012: planning approved by Sedgemoor District Council; construction starts
•2013: construction new flood banks completed; hand-over to WWT
•2014: opened as WWT Steart Marshes; paths finished; breach completed
•3km of new creek; 5km of new embankment
•0.5 million m3 of excavated material
4. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Inter-tidal habitat
•a change in landscape from improved pasture/cultivated land to saltmarsh
•accretion will allow for the natural development of dynamic intertidal habitats
•benefit to specialised plants, migratory waterfowl and fish
•some areas will inundate infrequently and resemble permanent pasture
•a working landscape underpinned by an extensive grazing system
•over 300ha of saltmarsh providing a living, natural flood defence
5. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Functional freshwater wetlands
•improved storage capacity within local IDB rhyne network
•ability to store flood water within ‘higher catchment’
•safe visitor access to enhanced wetland landscape
•150ha mosaic of wildlife-rich freshwater wetlands
•integral part of a wider local landscape: Bridgwater Bay and Pawlett Hams
•a refuge for species such as great crested newt, water vole and otter
6. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
People and Wildlife
•continue to forge strong links with local residents and Parish communities
•enhanced visitor experience through provision of safe coastal access
•over 10km of new multi-use paths including regional & national coastal trails
•develop opportunities for volunteering, skills learning and research
•WWT staff presence: site manager and community engagement
•provide access to nature through appropriate levels of interpretation, wardened activities and self guided trails to focal observation points
7. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Constraints and design
8. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Vision, changes and management
9. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Construction
10. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Computer aided design
11. Breach completion
WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
12. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Reserve enhancements
13. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Survey, monitoring, review and adaptation
14. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
Learning, engagement, training and volunteering
15. WWT Steart Marshes – a wetland working for people and wildlife Tim McGrath
http://steart.wwt.org.uk/
https://twitter.com/WWTSteart
https://www.facebook.com/wwtsteartmarshes
Communications
“We need to be brave and bold if we are going to deal with the impacts of climate change. WWT Steart Marshes proves you can protect homes and businesses by using wetland technology that works with nature, not against it.”
WWT Chief Executive Martin Spray CBE