This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

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Horwood Beer-Master
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This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Horwood Beer-Master » Sat Nov 26, 2011 7:07 pm

...alas I can't afford them. :sigh:
the BBC wrote:Broads are home to rare plants and animals

A quarter of the UK's rarest plants and animals are found in the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads, according to a survey.

The University of East Anglia (UEA) researchers believe it is the highest concentration of such species found in one area, including some that do not appear anywhere else in Britain.

But they also identified more than 60 species now considered extinct.

The findings will be used to help protect wetland habitats that could be vulnerable to future climate changes.

Andrea Kelly, an ecologist with the Broads Authority which manages the wetlands and commissioned the study, said even the experts were surprised at the diversity they found.

"We've always known that the Broads is an absolute wildlife hotspot but we were blown away by the amount of species.

"We've got over 11,000 species in the Broads and so many of those, over 1,500, are rare - and many of those, if the Broads didn't exist, wouldn't be here.

"So the Broads is a very special place and has so many rare species," she said.

'Vulnerable'

The research carried out by UEA is believed to be the first complete audit of exactly what lives in the Broads. It combined the most recent data with other uncollated records dating back to the 17th Century.

Some of the rare species found in the area, such as the swallowtail butterfly, are well documented.

But hundreds more species thought to be there haven't been recorded in over two decades - a sign they could have disappeared.

One of the researchers, Dr Hannah Mossman, said many of the animals living in the Broads were at risk and could be particularly affected by any future changes in sea levels.

"Very few of them are able to tolerate changes in salinity. They ... nearly all require fresh water conditions so they're very vulnerable to changes in sea level which might cause increases in the salt in the water, " she said.

"They're also vulnerable to, potentially, to drying out if we have dry autumns and dry winters, and they're vulnerable to higher temperatures in the summer potentially as well."

The study also found some species had recovered in number in recent years including the crane, otter, bittern and marsh harrier.

The fen raft spider has recently been reintroduced to the Suffolk Broads and the fen mason wasp, which was formerly regarded as extinct in Britain, was rediscovered in the Norfolk Broads in 1986.

Although the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads make up only 0.4% of the UK, Ms Kelly said there were a number of reasons why it was home to so much wildlife.

"Factors include the presence of water, with large rivers flowing to the sea, and the wet peat soils. Water is a provider of life, the ditches, pools, lakes and fens are the places that wildlife seeks out," she said.

"The important thing, though, is people. People have been managing the Broads for centuries, digging peat, cutting reed beds, digging drains, managing water levels and creating places for wildlife."
I hope I do manage to get a few more visits in before half of East Anglia becomes an arm of the North Sea.
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by JimC » Sat Nov 26, 2011 10:09 pm

Arthur Ransome wrote some wonderful children's stories many years ago. Some, like The Coot Club, were set in the Norfolk broads. I have fond memories of them, and always thought I would love to be on a boat there...
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Geoff » Sat Nov 26, 2011 11:49 pm

Anyone else thinking of the American usage of "broads"...?
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by HomerJay » Sat Nov 26, 2011 11:54 pm

I sort of sealed the deal with the missus on a yacht on the Boards, one Easter, it was t-shirt weather and we ate crab at Horning, The Swan pub, IIRC.

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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Jonesboy » Sun Nov 27, 2011 5:06 am

Horwood Beer-Master wrote:...alas I can't afford them. :sigh:
the BBC wrote:Broads are home to rare plants and animals

A quarter of the UK's rarest plants and animals are found in the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads, according to a survey.

The University of East Anglia (UEA) researchers believe it is the highest concentration of such species found in one area, including some that do not appear anywhere else in Britain.

But they also identified more than 60 species now considered extinct.

The findings will be used to help protect wetland habitats that could be vulnerable to future climate changes.

Andrea Kelly, an ecologist with the Broads Authority which manages the wetlands and commissioned the study, said even the experts were surprised at the diversity they found.

"We've always known that the Broads is an absolute wildlife hotspot but we were blown away by the amount of species.

"We've got over 11,000 species in the Broads and so many of those, over 1,500, are rare - and many of those, if the Broads didn't exist, wouldn't be here.

"So the Broads is a very special place and has so many rare species," she said.

'Vulnerable'

The research carried out by UEA is believed to be the first complete audit of exactly what lives in the Broads. It combined the most recent data with other uncollated records dating back to the 17th Century.

Some of the rare species found in the area, such as the swallowtail butterfly, are well documented.

But hundreds more species thought to be there haven't been recorded in over two decades - a sign they could have disappeared.

One of the researchers, Dr Hannah Mossman, said many of the animals living in the Broads were at risk and could be particularly affected by any future changes in sea levels.

"Very few of them are able to tolerate changes in salinity. They ... nearly all require fresh water conditions so they're very vulnerable to changes in sea level which might cause increases in the salt in the water, " she said.

"They're also vulnerable to, potentially, to drying out if we have dry autumns and dry winters, and they're vulnerable to higher temperatures in the summer potentially as well."

The study also found some species had recovered in number in recent years including the crane, otter, bittern and marsh harrier.

The fen raft spider has recently been reintroduced to the Suffolk Broads and the fen mason wasp, which was formerly regarded as extinct in Britain, was rediscovered in the Norfolk Broads in 1986.

Although the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads make up only 0.4% of the UK, Ms Kelly said there were a number of reasons why it was home to so much wildlife.

"Factors include the presence of water, with large rivers flowing to the sea, and the wet peat soils. Water is a provider of life, the ditches, pools, lakes and fens are the places that wildlife seeks out," she said.

"The important thing, though, is people. People have been managing the Broads for centuries, digging peat, cutting reed beds, digging drains, managing water levels and creating places for wildlife."
I hope I do manage to get a few more visits in before half of East Anglia becomes an arm of the North Sea.
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by JimC » Sun Nov 27, 2011 5:09 am

Jonesboy, that was an outstandingly idiotic comment.

Even by your abysmal standards.
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Jonesboy » Sun Nov 27, 2011 5:25 am

JimC wrote:Jonesboy, that was an outstandingly idiotic comment.

Even by your abysmal standards.
I have standards. It is true. And none more no less than is celebrated here, among exalted company, heroes, workers, profound men all.

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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by laklak » Sun Nov 27, 2011 5:29 am

Geoff wrote:Anyone else thinking of the American usage of "broads"...?
Being on the right broad can indeed be a holiday of sorts.
Yeah well that's just, like, your opinion, man.

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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Geoff » Sun Nov 27, 2011 1:59 pm

Jonesboy wrote:
Horwood Beer-Master wrote:...alas I can't afford them. :sigh:
the BBC wrote:Broads are home to rare plants and animals

A quarter of the UK's rarest plants and animals are found in the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads, according to a survey.

The University of East Anglia (UEA) researchers believe it is the highest concentration of such species found in one area, including some that do not appear anywhere else in Britain.

But they also identified more than 60 species now considered extinct.

The findings will be used to help protect wetland habitats that could be vulnerable to future climate changes.

Andrea Kelly, an ecologist with the Broads Authority which manages the wetlands and commissioned the study, said even the experts were surprised at the diversity they found.

"We've always known that the Broads is an absolute wildlife hotspot but we were blown away by the amount of species.

"We've got over 11,000 species in the Broads and so many of those, over 1,500, are rare - and many of those, if the Broads didn't exist, wouldn't be here.

"So the Broads is a very special place and has so many rare species," she said.

'Vulnerable'

The research carried out by UEA is believed to be the first complete audit of exactly what lives in the Broads. It combined the most recent data with other uncollated records dating back to the 17th Century.

Some of the rare species found in the area, such as the swallowtail butterfly, are well documented.

But hundreds more species thought to be there haven't been recorded in over two decades - a sign they could have disappeared.

One of the researchers, Dr Hannah Mossman, said many of the animals living in the Broads were at risk and could be particularly affected by any future changes in sea levels.

"Very few of them are able to tolerate changes in salinity. They ... nearly all require fresh water conditions so they're very vulnerable to changes in sea level which might cause increases in the salt in the water, " she said.

"They're also vulnerable to, potentially, to drying out if we have dry autumns and dry winters, and they're vulnerable to higher temperatures in the summer potentially as well."

The study also found some species had recovered in number in recent years including the crane, otter, bittern and marsh harrier.

The fen raft spider has recently been reintroduced to the Suffolk Broads and the fen mason wasp, which was formerly regarded as extinct in Britain, was rediscovered in the Norfolk Broads in 1986.

Although the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads make up only 0.4% of the UK, Ms Kelly said there were a number of reasons why it was home to so much wildlife.

"Factors include the presence of water, with large rivers flowing to the sea, and the wet peat soils. Water is a provider of life, the ditches, pools, lakes and fens are the places that wildlife seeks out," she said.

"The important thing, though, is people. People have been managing the Broads for centuries, digging peat, cutting reed beds, digging drains, managing water levels and creating places for wildlife."
I hope I do manage to get a few more visits in before half of East Anglia becomes an arm of the North Sea.
I see. You are an atheist who puts something on a pedestal.
Work that dirt. Work that dirt.
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Svartalf » Sun Nov 27, 2011 2:25 pm

Geoff wrote:Anyone else thinking of the American usage of "broads"...?
I have from the start, but failed to find a formulation that I deemed postworthy.
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Sun Nov 27, 2011 2:50 pm

:sad: Oh, those kind of broads. :sigh:
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by tattuchu » Sun Nov 27, 2011 4:03 pm

laklak wrote:
Geoff wrote:Anyone else thinking of the American usage of "broads"...?
Being on the right broad can indeed be a holiday of sorts.
I like to lay on ze bitch. :awesomecat:
People think "queue" is just "q" followed by 4 silent letters.

But those letters are not silent.

They're just waiting their turn.

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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Sun Nov 27, 2011 4:10 pm

tattuchu wrote:
laklak wrote:
Geoff wrote:Anyone else thinking of the American usage of "broads"...?
Being on the right broad can indeed be a holiday of sorts.
I like to lay on ze bitch. :awesomecat:
Except when you are the bitch, of course.
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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by tattuchu » Sun Nov 27, 2011 4:14 pm

Gawdzilla wrote:
tattuchu wrote:
laklak wrote:
Geoff wrote:Anyone else thinking of the American usage of "broads"...?
Being on the right broad can indeed be a holiday of sorts.
I like to lay on ze bitch. :awesomecat:
Except when you are the bitch, of course.
I do tend to collect flotsam and jetsam, and stink under the heat of too much sun :ask:
People think "queue" is just "q" followed by 4 silent letters.

But those letters are not silent.

They're just waiting their turn.

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Re: This is one reason I like holidays on the Broads

Post by Gawdzilla Sama » Sun Nov 27, 2011 4:23 pm

Is that a Hemingway quote?
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