wickham hall farm bishop`s stortford great crested newt report
Transcription
wickham hall farm bishop`s stortford great crested newt report
WICKHAM HALL FARM BISHOP’S STORTFORD GREAT CRESTED NEWT REPORT Report for Sworders Agricultural October 2010 Client: Sworders Agricultural Title: Wickham Hall Farm, Bishop’s Strortford Great Crested Newt & Bat Survey Project No: AEL 300 Date of Issue: Draft – 14 June 2010 Final - 22 October 2010 Status: Final Signed on behalf of Applied Ecology Ltd: Dr Duncan Painter Director CONTACT DETAILS: APPLIED ECOLOGY LTD St. John's Innovation Centre Cowley Road Cambridge CB4 0WS Tel: 01223 422 116 Fax: 01223 420 844 Mobile: 07725 811 777 Email: info@appliedecology.co.uk Wickham Hall Farm Great Crested Newt Report Contents 1 1.1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................2 Background..............................................................................................................................2 2 2.1 2.2 2.3 Great Crested Newt ...............................................................................................................3 Background..............................................................................................................................3 Survey Approach ....................................................................................................................5 Survey Findings ......................................................................................................................7 3 Development Impacts & Mitigation ..................................................................................9 Applied Ecology Ltd Wickham Hall Farm 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 BACKGROUND 1.1.1 Great Crested Newt Report Applied Ecology Ltd was commissioned by Sworders Agricultural to complete a great crested newt Triturus cristatus presence / absence survey of ponds located around a proposed re-development of farm buildings at Wickham Hall Farm, Bishop’s Stortford, Hertfordshire, CM23 1JG. In addition to the newt survey a visual inspection of the farm buildings was completed for evidence of their use by roosting bats and is reported separately. 1.1.2 The great crested newt survey was completed during the peak of the 2010 amphibian breeding season between by an experienced AEL ecologist (Dr Duncan Painter CEnv MIEEM) under the auspices of his Natural England GCN survey and handling licence (no. 20100376). Applied Ecology Ltd 2 Wickham Hall Farm Great Crested Newt Report 2 GREAT CRESTED NEWT 2.1 BACKGROUND 2.1.1 A survey for great crested newts (referred to hereafter as GCN) was first completed by other consultants in July 20061. This investigated four standing water bodies within 500m of Wickham Hall farm buildings, one of which was completely dry and one nearly dry at the time of the survey. No GCN were found in any of the water bodies and the report concluded that development at Wickham Hall would have no impacts on any known GCN habitat. It is of note that the 2006 survey was conducted at a time that was outside the recognised survey window for conducting GCN survey, and relied solely on the use of a pond net to catch GCN and did not therefore comply with best practice survey guidance for this species. Great Crested Newt Ecology 2.1.2 Great crested newt (GCN) is one the UK’s most threatened amphibian species and has demonstrated a marked decline in abundance during the second part of the twentieth century. Like all UK amphibians, GCN relies on water bodies for breeding but otherwise spend much of their lives on land. 2.1.3 Adult newts commence their migration to breeding ponds after emergence from winter hibernation, which depending upon local weather conditions, can take place from late January to mid March. Movements tend to occur following rain when air temperatures are greater than 5oC. Peak courtship and egg-laying is normally from mid-March to mid-May. During this time females lay two or three eggs a day over a period of several weeks, and can lay up to 200-300 eggs in total. The eggs are placed on submerged aquatic plants, and carefully wrapped in leaves. 2.1.4 The larvae hatch after about three weeks and feed on a range of small aquatic invertebrate prey. They complete their metamorphosis into air-breathing juveniles about four months later. Juvenile emergence from the breeding pond normally takes place in August and lasts for around two months. Juvenile newts then take between two and four years to reach sexual maturity during which time they are mainly land based. Adult newts generally leave the breeding ponds from late Jones & Sons Environmental Sciences Ltd (August 2006) Wickham Hall Ponds Bishops’s Stortford Hertfordshire 2006 Great Crested Newt Report. Report for Sworders Agricultural 1 Applied Ecology Ltd 3 Wickham Hall Farm Great Crested Newt Report May onwards. 2.1.5 Adults and immature newts spend the winter in places that provide shelter from frost and flooding typically between October and February. Hibernation sites will vary but can include underground refuges amongst tree roots, in mammal burrows, or above ground sites under deadwood or rubble piles for example. 2.1.6 Breeding ponds are usually small to medium-sized (around 50-250m²) with plentiful aquatic vegetation for egg-laying. Optimum ponds for breeding newts typically possess abundant submerged plant material with prolific emergent/floating vegetation covering approximately one third of the water surface. Such well-established, mid-succession ponds will also ideally contain less vegetated areas to allow adult males to display in clear view of females. GCN can be found in both acid and alkaline water bodies although they are more frequently found in water that is close to neutral or slightly alkaline. Ponds that dry out infrequently can support very good populations as periodic drying reduces the populations of the newts’ main predators, principally fish and dragonfly larvae. Ponds also need to support a healthy invertebrate fauna to provide food for developing newt larvae. Clusters of suitable ponds have been found to greatly enhance great crested newt breeding success. 2.1.7 There are four primary requirements for great crested newt terrestrial habitats, (1) permanent areas of refuge habitat for shelter in extreme weather conditions, (2) foraging opportunities, (3) daytime refuges, and (4) dispersal opportunities. Habitats that meet many of these requirements include broad-leaved woodland, rough grassland and scrub, and a mixture of these in close proximity is ideal. 2.1.8 In order to help maintain populations it is important that newts are able to successfully move between hibernation sites and breeding ponds, as well as other sites. To allow this to happen there should be areas of suitable land habitat between areas. Studies have shown that newts commonly move between ponds that are within around 250 metres of each other. Barriers that inhibit migration and dispersal include roads with large volumes of traffic, large or fast-flowing rivers, built-up areas, and large expanses of intensively farmed land. Great Crested Newt Legislation 2.1.9 GCN is fully protected under the Wildlife and Countryside Act, 1981, (as amended and as strengthened by the CROW Act, 2000) and the Conservation (Natural Habitats, &c.) Regulations 1994 that implements the EC Directive Applied Ecology Ltd 4 Wickham Hall Farm Great Crested Newt Report 92/43/EEC in the UK. It is an offence, with certain exceptions, to: • Intentionally or deliberately capture, kill, or injure GCN; • Intentionally or recklessly damage, destroy, and disturb GCN in a place used for shelter or protection, or obstruct access to such areas; 2.1.10 • Damage or destroy a GCN breeding site or resting place; • Possess a GCN, or any part of it, unless acquired lawfully; and • Sell, barter, exchange, transport, or offer for sale GCN or parts of them. The legislation covers all newt life stages such that eggs, tadpoles and adult newts are all equally protected. Actions that are prohibited can be made lawful by a licence issued by the appropriate statutory authority. 2.1.11 GCN can commute up to 500m from their breeding ponds, with most being found within 250m of a breeding site in suitable habitat. 2.2 SURVEY APPROACH 2.2.1 Guidance for GCN survey has been produced by English Nature2. 2.2.2 In order to prove GCN presence or absence from a pond in relation to development, EN 2001 recommends three survey methods should be completed in all ponds within theoretical GCN commuting range of the development site. These are torch survey, bottle [or funnel] trapping and egg searching. The same best practice guidance also recommends that four separate survey visits should be completed between mid-March and mid-June as a reasonable standard of survey effort to prove GCN presence/absence, with at least two of the visits being completed during the theoretical peak in GCN numbers in their breeding ponds between mid-April and mid-May. 2.2.3 The methodological approach adopted by this survey was based on the use of three methods, torch survey, funnel-trapping and egg searching between 22 April and 10 May 2010. 2.2.4 A walkover survey of the site was first conducted to locate all previously identified water bodies and any additional standing water habitat that may have not been evident previously. 2 English Nature (2001) Great crested newt mitigation guidelines. Version August 2001 Applied Ecology Ltd 5 Wickham Hall Farm 2.2.5 Great Crested Newt Report A total of six standing water bodies are present within 500m of the site as indicated by Figure 1. A visual assessment of each was conducted to assess their suitability as habitat for GCN using the Habitat Suitability Index (HSI) approach Natural England advises should be completed as part of GCN assessment of ponds. 2.2.6 2.2.7 The HSI scores for each pond were as follows: • Pond 1 – 0.47 • Pond 2 – 0.49 • Pond 3 – 0.56 • Pond 4 – 0.49 • Pond 5 – 0.23 Only one water body (Pond 3) had an HSI score above the 0.5 threshold that makes it theoretically suitable aquatic habitat for GCN breeding. Water bodies with scores of less than 0.5 are generally regarded as being unsuitable for GCN. 2.2.8 Pond 5 was a private fishing lake reported to be stocked with rainbow trout. An extensive search of submerged aquatic vegetation that was suitable for GCN egg laying was conducted on 22 April around its entire margin, and despite the presence of numerous suitable submerged aquatic plants being present, no newt eggs were found. On this basis and the obvious presence of a large predatory fish population, and the very low HSI score, no further survey work for GCN was conducted as the water body was clearly unsuitable habitat for GCN. 2.2.9 All the remaining water bodies (Ponds 1-4) were surveyed for GCN presence / absence as outlined below. Funnel Trapping 2.2.10 Double ended funnel traps (40cm x 20cm, with a 3mm square mesh) were set at regular intervals around the accessible perimeters of Ponds 1-4 in order to capture newts. The traps work on the same basis as plastic drinks bottle traps but are larger and have two as opposed to one inverted funnel entrance. They are set such that the top third of the trap is out of the water in order that any captured newts can reach the water surface to gulp air and therefore not die from asphyxiation – a Applied Ecology Ltd 6 Pond 5 Pond 4 Pond 3 Pond 2 Pond 1 N Wickham Hall Great Crested Newt Survey Figure 1: Pond locations Pond 1 Pond 1 Pond 2 Pond 3 Pond 4 Pond 5 Wickham Hall Great Crested Newt Survey Photo-sheet 1 of 1 Photos taken April 2010 Wickham Hall Farm Great Crested Newt Report potential problem with plastic drink bottle traps. The number of traps used was proportional to the range of littoral aquatic habitats present in each water body and were set at approximately 2m centres around the accessible perimeters of all water bodies. 2.2.11 The traps were set in the evening of 21, 22, 27 of April and 9 May and retrieved the following morning in accordance with the recommended trapping times described by EN 2001. 2.2.12 A total of 15 funnel traps were set around the perimeter of Pond 1, seven around Pond 2, five around Pond 3 and five around Pond 4 on each survey occasion. Egg Searching 2.2.13 A search for GCN eggs on a selection of suitable submerged aquatic vegetation was conducted on each survey occasion until such time that GCN eggs were found. Searches were conducted for approximately 15 minutes on each occasion. Torch Light Survey 2.2.14 A one million candle power torch (Clulite CB2 Clubman Deluxe) was used to conduct an after dark torch light survey of each water body on the first survey occasion in April 2010. The survey was undertaken in complete darkness between the hours of 21.00 and 22.00 by walking slowly around the perimeter of each water body and shining the torch into the water to enable a count of all newts seen to be made. 2.2.15 The effectiveness of torch survey in three of the four water bodies was severely limited by two different factors. These were turbid water in Pond 1, and the presence of floating algae in Ponds 2 and 4, which restricted views through the water column to such an extent that funnel trapping the same evening caught significantly greater numbers of newts than seen with the torch. On the basis of the obvious limitations of the torch survey the method was not repeated. 2.3 2.3.1 SURVEY FINDINGS GCN was captured in the funnel traps in three of the four ponds that were surveyed as follows: • Pond 1 – no amphibians seen or captured on any occasion – a coarse fish stocked lake unsuitable for GCN. Applied Ecology Ltd 7 Wickham Hall Farm 2.3.2 Great Crested Newt Report • Pond 2 – total no. of GCN caught on each survey occasion: 15, 8, 9, 2 • Pond 3 – total no. of GCN caught on each occasion: 1, 2, 0, 0 • Pond 4 – total no. of GCN captured on each occasion: 0, 1, 0, 0 On the basis of the survey findings reported above, it would appear that Pond 2 is likely to support a “medium” sized GCN population, and Ponds 3 and 4 a small GCN population according to EN 2001. 2.3.3 No GCN eggs were found in any of the ponds, however egg bound female GCN were caught from Pond 2 that were considered most likely to be laying eggs on submerged leafs as no other suitable aquatic vegetation was present due to the high degree of shade the pond was subject to from surrounding woodland. 2.3.4 Pond 3 supported at least three different GCN (including male and female animals), and it is considered likely that it was present as a small breeding population. A single GCN egg was found on submerged aquatic vegetation on the second survey visit occasion. 2.3.5 A single sub-adult male GCN was caught in Pond 4 on one survey occasion only. The pond does not appear to support a breeding population of GCN and is mostly likely being used as a feeding site by newts. 2.3.6 In addition to GCN, smooth newts were caught using funnel traps from Pond 2 (maximum 5 animals), Pond 3 (maximum three animals), Pond 4 (maximum 10 animals). Applied Ecology Ltd 8 Wickham Hall Farm 3 3.1.1 Great Crested Newt Report DEVELOPMENT IMPACTS & MITIGATION The survey has verified the presence of two breeding populations of GCN within commuting range of the development site. 3.1.2 Future development involving the loss of any terrestrial habitat of potential value to GCN, notably woodland, rank grassland, hedgerows and scrub that is located within range of the breeding ponds may result in the accidental killing and injury of GCN and would need to be implemented under the auspices of a Natural England development licence that can only be issued once planning permission for the development has been issued. 3.1.3 For the purposes of informing the planning application, it will be necessary to provide outline details of the mitigation strategy that will be adopted to minimise adverse short and long term impacts on GCN in order to demonstrate that they are feasible to implement. 3.1.4 On the basis of the outline development plans discussed with Sworders, the GCN mitigation approach would be as follows: • Retention, protection and enhancement of the existing GCN breeding and terrestrial habitat resource; • Creation of compensatory newt friendly habitat areas (e.g. new woodland and hedgerows) to replace and enhance terrestrial habitats of value to GCN that are to be lost or damaged as a result of the development. • Use of temporary amphibian fencing (TAF) and pitfall traps to isolate and capture GCN from all terrestrial habitats within GCN range of breeding ponds that are to be lost/damaged as a result of development construction during the newt active period (April to October). The amount of effort (capture nights) that will be required to clear areas of GCN will be dependent upon the size of the GCN population impacted – this would normally require a six-visit breeding pond survey during the Spring. For medium sized GCN populations, the minimum number of trapping nights to clear terrestrial areas of newts would be 60 nights in suitable conditions (damp ground and minimum night time temperatures of above five degrees Celsius). • Integration of new hard landscapes to minimise adverse impacts on GCN as a result of the operational development e.g. the use of a newt-friendly surface Applied Ecology Ltd 9 Wickham Hall Farm Great Crested Newt Report water drainage scheme e.g. avoiding the use of ill sited gulley pots that GCN could fall into. 3.1.5 In practice the development has been designed to minimise adverse impacts on GCN as far as is practicable, and an associated landscape masterplan has been produced (see Appendix 1) that shows it will be possible to mitigate any adverse development impacts on GCN and enhance the population integrity of GCN within the site in the long-term. Applied Ecology Ltd 10 Wickham Hall Farm Great Crested Newt Report Appendix 1 Applied Ecology Ltd 11