Island Life Magazine Ltd October/November 2010 | Page 95

country life Island Life - October/November 2010 Country Park near Southampton. Here and elsewhere the be even more positive. The chalk rivers of Hampshire can Trust is working hard on habitat restoration projects. potentially provide ideal habitats. Gently flowing rivers with well vegetated banks and relatively soft substrate 6. White-clawed crayfish provide perfect conditions for maintaining water vole The white-clawed crayfish is Britain’s only native crayfish colonies. Where there is a strong fishery interest there is species and lives in clean, mineral-rich rivers, streams, lakes often the presence of a river keeper and these are very and ponds. It was formerly widespread across England and effective in keeping mink under control. Consequently the was particularly common in the chalk rivers of Hampshire. rivers Test and Itchen are recognised as key sites for water However it has suffered a dramatic decline, primarily because vole. On the Isle of Wight the same can be said but with the of the introduction and rapid expansion of the non-native added advantage that there are no mink. For this reason, it is signal crayfish and the spread of the disease carried by it. The likely that the Island is home to the safest population in the situation is particularly serious in Hampshire where there has whole of the UK. been a 95% reduction in populations. However, the Trust and its partners, including the Environment Agency and private landowners, are working together to protect the existing population. We are improving adjacent habitats and scoping the potential of providing other safe havens or ‘ark sites’ in the future. It’s not all bad news Thanks to Trust staff and volunteers there have been some spectacular success stories in our counties in recent years. Here are some examples that have been brought back from the brink. Field cow-wheat Known from only four sites in Britain, field cow-wheat has Photo: White clawed crayfish by Environment Agency received a bad press for centuries. Also known as ‘poverty weed’, the seeds of this attractive plant were too large to be sifted from wheat and as a result ‘tainted’ the flour, making it unusable for bread making. As a result the plant was systematically destroyed by farmers. Lost from cultivated fields, field cow-wheat clung onto the maritime cliffs at St Lawrence and at the Wildlife Trust’s nature reserve at St Lawrence Bank. In 2005 the Trust acquired the field immediately adjacent to the field cow-wheat 6