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Floodplain meadow restoration – Old Hall Farm

Floodplain meadow restoration in Mayfield by White Peak Farmers

We received funding from Severn Trent Water through their Boost for Biodiversity programme, which has funded the creation of wetland habitat and restoration of floodplain meadows on the River Dove.

Floodplain meadows are a rare habitat and so their restoration is important. They also provide a sustainable way to produce a crop to feed to livestock and have many benefits from helping to keep rivers clean by removing nutrients, sequestering carbon, and storing water thereby helping to reduce flooding.

The work carried out has been supported by the Floodplain Meadows Partnership and you can watch a short film featuring the landowner, Graham Prince here

Wetland features including scrapes, reprofiled and new ditch, ponds and pools have been created and an area where water levels have been raised have also been created. The scrapes and ditch scallops have already attracted a number of new species for the farm including great white egret, small egret, green sandpiper as well as grey wagtail, kingfisher and sedge warbler which bred this summer for the first time on the farm.

Great white egret at the floodplain meadow. Photo Graham Prince

Snipe use the newly rewet, rushy areas in the winter and several species of dragonfly have started to use the new pools and ponds including the broad bodied chaser dragonfly, Libellula quadrimaculata

Broad bodied chaser dragonfly at Old Hall Farm. Photo Graham Prince

Posted in sustainable farming, case studies, floodplain meadows

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