Panorama
 
 
 
 
 

ECOLOGISTS DISCOVER COLONY OF ENDANGERED ANIMALS


Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2009


Ecologists from the Environment Agency have discovered a thriving colony of water voles, one of Britain's most threatened mammals, near Darfield in South Yorkshire.

Evidence of the voles was discovered in July 2009 during a routine inspection of Little Houghton Marsh, an Environment Agency flood-defence washland. The ecologists then did a more detailed survey, which revealed a colony of around 20 of the animals.

"The discovery of water voles at Little Houghton Marsh is particularly important, as the site is due to be developed into a wetland reserve early in 2010, and the plans will now also incorporate water vole-friendly features," said Andrew Virtue, a biodiversity officer for the Environment Agency.

The current plans aim to provide habitat for a range of important species, including lapwing, grass snake and some rare invertebrates.

"None of the works will affect the principal function of the washland site - to help protect the people of Darfield from flooding", says Andrew. "All the excess soil from the works will be removed from site, so there will be no loss of flood storage capacity.”

The site is separated from the River Dearne by a large embankment and so may have escaped the attention of mink, which are probably the single biggest threat to water vole and have been cited as a major reason for their dramatic decline in recent years.

The results of the vole survey will also be fed into the Riparian Mammals Project, a partnership between the Environment Agency, Natural England, the South Yorkshire Biodiversity Forum, the RSPB, Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and the Barnsley Biodiversity Trust.

The project aims to survey potential water vole sites away from the Dearne and identify new potential sites for wetland creation.
Environment Agency and businesses work together to tackle climate change
Methane gas emissions from closed and operational landfill sites contribute to an estimated 3% of the UK’s total greenhouse gas emissions and methane is a very potent greenhouse gas. It is over twenty times more effective over short time scales than carbon dioxide at trapping heat within the earth’s atmosphere.

In its 5 year strategic plan, the Environment Agency has included the need to ‘act to reduce climate change and its consequences’ as a priority work area. Working with waste managers to reduce methane emissions from landfill sites is one way of achieving this.

Environment Agency officers from the South Essex Pollution Prevention and Control team have done just that. In partnership with a local landfill operator a significant reduction in methane emissions has been achieved.

Environment Agency’s climate change specialist, Keesje Crawford-Avis said. “Evidence suggests that we need to engage people close to home if we are going to succeed in changing attitudes to climate change”.

“We need people to understand that climate change is happening here and now, that it will affect all of us, and that there are things we and businesses can do to help reduce our personal contribution to climate change”.

Veolia Environmental Services Ltd, the recycling and waste management company which operates a landfill site in South Ockendon has always accepted the environmental need to maximise methane capture. As part of its ongoing programme for landfill gas management, the company installed 79 ‘sacrificial’ gas wells into an active area of the landfill. The new gas wells are ensuring methane is extracted from this area until such time as final waste levels are achieved and permanent wells can be installed.

It is estimated that the new gas wells will capture an additional 3700 tonnes of methane in a year.

Paul Levett, Deputy Chief Executive, Veolia Environmental Services (UK) Plc said. “We are committed to promoting reduction, reuse and recycling and supporting energy recovery both as a means to reduce the consumption of fossil fuels and to cut greenhouse gases. The installation of these wells at our south Essex site will maximise landfill gas capture, significantly reduce methane emissions and generate sustainable energy.

 

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom
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