Outcome NR4
Rivers and streams are in good ecological health
Rivers and streams (becks, sikes, gills) which function well for wildlife need clean water (free from non-natural nutrient load or human-made chemicals), open riparian areas with species-rich marginal vegetation (a more natural vegetation control), an absence of invasive non-native species or human-made obstructions to fish passage, and significant shade from scrub and trees.
Although many of our upland water courses look very natural, many are highly modified, and reconnecting watercourses with their natural floodplain is an obvious first step to achieving multiple objectives, including enhancement of waterbodies and riparian land for wildlife and downstream flood management. Roughening watercourses using large wood, diversifying the in-channel morphology, and floodplain interventions such as riparian ponds, scrapes, and backwaters are all options.
The currently exposed nature of our watercourses combined with climate change impacts means that water temperatures are already dangerously high for many species. Research suggests that water temperature reduction is most effectively achieved through planting in headwaters approximately 5-20 km from source [38].
Riparian land is often highly modified through heavy grazing. Better structural and species diversity can be achieved through the exclusion of, or reduction in, grazing, depending on whether the objective is species rich open habitat, or natural colonisation of scrub for river shade and other biodiversity benefits.
The restoration of these natural processes, within stream and bankside, are the basis for a more diverse flora and fauna. As habitat engineers, beavers can restore many of these natural processes in one go, and their role in our landscape needs to be considered seriously and carefully.
What other natural services does this outcome provide?
Reducing nutrient and chemical input into water courses not only benefits wildlife but helps reduce the need for expensive chemical and biological treatment of water for drinking.
Reconnecting watercourses with their flood plains, planting trees in the catchment, and reducing human-made obstructions so watercourse behave more naturally, all contribute to reducing peak flows in flood conditions, and reducing the risks of downstream flooding.
Riparian tree planting can also have a localised cooling effect on rivers, helping to reduce climate change impacts on fish and other aquatic wildlife.
Rivers and streams in good ecological health implies meeting the conditions for the species which would naturally occur here.
Which species are supported by this outcome?
Champion species
Beaver; Dipper; Salmon; Water vole
Measures for outcome NR4
Select each measure for its full detail and to view the organisations and groups with an important role in making them happen.
Restore natural processes in rivers and streams where they have been modified. This can include: • Re-meandering of straightened channels • Wet woodland establishment and more wood in rivers • Removal of human-made obstructions (weirs, flood barriers, bank deposits etc.) • Removing stock from rivers • Creating beaver dam analogues to divert water at high flow
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • | • |
Design beaver re-introduction and land manager compensation schemes which would allow re-introduction after feasibility work seeking suitable locations.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
All farms to have nutrient management plans & adhere to catchment sensitive farming guidance, in order to reduce nutrient input into water courses to background levels.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
Reduce use of agricultural herbicides (e.g. Glyphosate, Thistlex, MCPA) on farms and estates through alternative forms of management.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • | • |
Buffer streams and rivers from farmland inputs (zones 25m wide)
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • | • |
Reduce nutrients from sewage entering watercourses by:
Replacing septic tanks with modern Package Treatment Plants (PTPs).
Advocating for sewage treatment works to adopt tertiary treatment measures.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
Restrict grazing on riparian areas to support more structurally and species diverse habitat.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
Establish woodland and scrub along main rivers and tributaries and adjacent to reservoirs (through natural or assisted colonisation or through planting in buffer zones). Woodland Trust have produced a guide to design of riparian shade [39].
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • | • |
Support effective mine water treatment by the Mining Remediation Authority/Environment Agency at major pollution sources such as abandoned mine workings to reduce heavy metal contamination of watercourses.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
Use green engineering techniques to trap and hold diffuse pollution from more dispersed sources such as mine spoil heaps across a landscape.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
Report, monitor and control Invasive Non-Native Species (INNS) and follow current guidance for their removal in accordance with the Great Britain INNS Strategy [40]. Species of current concern include signal crayfish, Himalayan balsam, American mink, Japanese knotweed, parrots feather, and others.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • | • |
Ensure good biosecurity by following and disseminating guidance from the Non-native Species Secretariat – ‘Check, Clean & Dry’ [41].
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • | • |
Remove human-made obstructions to fish passage identified in individual catchment management plans.
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
Follow the guidance in ‘Water voles in the North Pennines - ditch maintenance, the law and best practice’ – to avoid inadvertent (and illegal) damage to water vole habitat during farming operations such as ditch clearance [62].
| Farmers & land managers | Conservation bodies | National and/or local government |
| • | • |
