Regular readers of the blog will know that, every year, Queen Mary University of London buys out some of my time and expertise from WTT to give their aquatic ecology MSc students practical training and experience in the field. As a part of a week-long field-course based in the Lake District, I have forged a link between them and Wyre Rivers Trust to monitor a project led by Tom Myerscough. Despite all the recent challenges impacting their year of study, some of the students have found the time to analyse the data and write us a guest blog to update the Woodplumpton Brook story.
Rivers and their catchments have had a tough time over the last century; intensive agriculture, urbanisation and the altering of waterways are just some of the human impacts affecting river ecosystems, threatening their health and often leaving them in a dire ecological state.
The Lancashire Wyre is one river that has unfortunately experienced more than its fair share of stressors within a catchment that covers approximately 450 km2. The Wyre is of social, economic and ecological importance but has suffered a plethora of post-war issues, including reduced water quality, physical modification, habitat degradation and increased flood risk. However, not all is lost! Catchment-based conservation approaches across the UK have so far been successful in improving water quality and reducing the pressures facing river ecosystems. With the major threats in the Wyre catchment emerging from livestock agriculture, many of the solutions are associated with land management such as the implementation of vegetation buffer zones that prevent livestock from grazing and trampling the riverbanks. This, alongside willow planting, acts as a sustainable method to reduce soil erosion, flood damage and poaching, whilst also ameliorating nutrient run-off and providing essential habitats and refugia for wildlife.
Such approaches are vital but do not solve every problem within the Wyre Catchment. Often overlooked in small watercourses, is the sheer number of artificial barriers hindering the passage of fish, resulting in poor habitat connectivity. On Woodplumpton Brook, a road-bridge culvert inadvertently introduced such a challenge: a 15m stretch of shallow water with an increased, uniform flow rate. This culvert fragmented and degraded habitats, isolated fish populations and reduced reproductive potential, especially for larger species or weaker swimmers, such as European eel, the lampreys, and brown trout.