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content@managingwater.co.uk Conservation & the Environment


Rare birds arrive before diggers finish creating new Somerset nature reserve


NINA JUKES, WWT


A rare white-rumped sandpiper is the latest unexpected arrival on the Steart peninsula, Somerset. It is currently recovering on a flooded field, despite being surrounded by one of the biggest construction projects in the south west.


The bird, which has been blown off course on its migration from Canada to South America, has been attracting bird watchers since the weekend.


It is the latest in a string of rare birds to be spotted, prompting speculation about the peninsula in Somerset, which is being transformed into one of the country’s largest wetland nature reserves.


Tim McGrath from WWT has been working closely with the Environment Agency, which is creating the nature reserve before handing it over to WWT to manage. He said:


“It is rather unexpected. We’re in the middle of construction so there are several large diggers rumbling around the site. There’s one small field that hasn’t drained but it has been simply teeming with birds over the last weeks, despite being surrounded by all this hubbub.


“We’re thrilled though. With birds like this turning up now, just imagine how it will be when the diggers are gone and we have 500 hectares of wetland, rather than just one field.”


Local photographer and birdwatcher Tim Taylor took the photos of the white- rumped sandpiper. He said:


“It’s exciting to see all the work underway. Somerset is already such a great place for birding, boosting it further will be a dream.”


The construction team has been working hard over the last few weeks. They are taking advantage of the dry weather to landscape the former fields into channels and embankments. The landscaping needs to be in place before the current sea wall is breached next year, letting in the tide and creating coastal wetland.


The white-rumped sandpiper was preceded by another North American wading bird, a pectoral sandpiper, probably similarly blown off course on its annual migration, and a wood sandpiper, a glossy ibis and a spoonbill. The rarities are an added interest to the little ringed plover, ruff and curlew sandpiper that regularly visit Steart.


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››› Tel: 01584 873131 Image courtesy of Tim Taylor (www.wildimaging.co.uk)


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