What's on offer?

If you have any interest in: Ufology, Paranormal, Angling, Paganism, the Eco-system and general controversy then this may just be the place for you. I am a published author of books concerning these particular topics...


/



Monday, 5 November 2018

Great Crested Newt in Woodvale



A Woodvale family in Southport were delighted to discover a Great Crested Newt (GCN) close to their Sandbrook Road garden pond yesterday.

The newt initially appeared to be injured. However, after a little TLC, it was carefully returned to the pond area when it started to recover. Species identity was later confirmed via email by a leading officer in the Froglife organisation.

https://www.froglife.org/info-advice/amphibians-and-reptiles/great-crested-newt/ 

Froglife advise:

'If you do inadvertently disturb great crested newts you should halt the work and return the newts gently to their resting place.'

Lancs Wildlife Trust has also confirmed ID, they advise...

"These are a European Protected Species, however you are allowed to move them if they are in danger. We advise putting it in some long grass, under some wood/stones as it will be getting ready to hibernate."

Great Crested Newts are the biggest newt species in the UK and have been around for approximately 40 million years.



















Activities that can harm great crested newts

Activities that can affect great crested newts include:

maintaining or restoring ponds, woodland, scrub or rough grassland
restoring forest areas to lowland heaths
ploughing close to breeding ponds or other bodies of water
removing dense vegetation and disturbing the ground
removing materials like dead wood piled on the ground
excavating the ground, for example, to renovate a building
filling in or destroying ponds or other water bodies

Building and development work can harm great crested newts and their habitats, for example, if it:

removes habitat or makes it unsuitable
disconnects or isolates habitats, such as by splitting it up
changes habitats of other species, reducing the newts’ food sources
increases shade and silt in ponds or other water bodies used by the newts
changes the water table
introduces fish, which will eat newt eggs or young
increases the numbers of people, traffic and pollutants in the area or the number of chemicals that run off into ponds


















Great Crested Newts have full legal protection under UK law making it an offence to kill, injure, capture, disturb or sell them, or to damage or destroy their habitats.  This applies to all life-stages.

What you must not do

Things that would cause you to break the law include:

capturing, killing, disturbing or injuring great crested newts deliberately
damaging or destroying a breeding or resting place
obstructing access to resting or sheltering places (deliberately or by not taking enough care)
possessing, selling, controlling or transporting live or dead newts, or parts of them
taking great crested newt eggs

You could get an unlimited fine and up to 6 months in prison for each offence if you’re found guilty.

Our UK wildlife is brilliant and needs all the help it can get. Consider creating a garden pond to help many species...

https://www.otsnews.co.uk/great-crested-newt-woodvale/ 


Pat Regan ©  


More... 






No comments:

Post a Comment