We have a new conservation opportunity with some Environment Agency funding to link into the eight sites where work has been completed with funding from National Highways as part of the Stafford Brooks project. All the sites improved for nature across Stafford are building a network of green and blue spaces through the local floodplains that both wildlife and people can enjoy. Our vision for Stafford is to have thriving habitats to aid nature’s recovery and inspire everyone to learn about what makes floodplains special.
The planned work will be along Kingston Brook, at Kingston Pool Covert (north) and Kingston Pool Covert (south) in Stafford. The northern area is owned by a group of passionate local residents who manage this key habitat for the community. Whereas the southern area is owned and managed by Stafford Borough Council. The work in both areas will be an expansion of the conservation that has already started at Kingston Pool Covert (south) with the Stafford Brooks partnership.
Together along with other sites in Stafford, these areas form a larger network of habitats across the county town that better aids nature’s recovery by enabling the movement of plants and animals across the wider landscape.
In the Trent Valley, Staffordshire Wildlife Trust has focused on using the natural pathways of rivers and floodplains as a strategic way to enhance the nature recovery network. Floodplains have a variety of different habitats within them, including ponds, woodlands, and grasslands. These habitats are found all across our county and at Kingston Pool Covert within the woodland and along the Kingston Brook, we have the chance to do more of this good work.
Here we will use a variety of conservation methods to enhance the wetland habitat and re-profile the river within the existing woodland habitat. This particular kind of woodland is called “wet woodland,” which is a UK priority habitat and very important to protect and maintain for wildlife.