Site Name, designation and description (if available)
Distance from Proposed Cable Corridor and Converter Station (m)
variety of plants. Rare sepcies include Scrophularia umbrosa (Green Figwort) and Hypericum montanum (Pale St. John's-wort). Although the meadow is lightly grazed, patches have been left ungrazed and here scrub and Chamerion angustifolium (Rosebay Willowherb) are invading.
RNR 144 CWS comprises chalk flora, species of note include Anacamptis pyramidalis (Pyramidal Orchid).
Kiln Farm Meadow CWS comprises areas of wet and dry grassland with a diverse flora, species of note include Dactylorhiza fuchsii (Common Spotted- orchid).
Burstall Long Wood ASNW & CWS is dominated by Fraxinus excelsior (Ash) and Acer campestre (Field Maple) coppice with mature Quercus sp. (Oak) standards and is enclosed on three sides by a ditch and bank. The ground flora, supports scarce woodland plants including Euphorbia amygdaloides (Wood Spurge) and Daphne laureola (Spurge-laurel). Sorbus domestica (Service-tree) is also present in Burstall Long Wood. Areas of dead wood provide a source of decaying timber for invertebrates and hole-nesting birds.
Harrison Wood WT is an area of mixed woodland.
Newbourne Springs RIGS is is a wooded valley with Spring fed streams that is of geological interest.
Woodbridge Wet Meadow CWS supports a diverse wetland flora, a notable feature of which is a large and thriving population of Dactylorhiza praetermissa (Southern Marsh Orchid). Other wetland species include Hypericum tetrapterum (Square-stalked St. John’s-wort) and Angelica sylvestris (Angelica). The drier slopes of the site support a plant community typically found on light soils in this part of Suffolk.
RNR 165 CWS is a Roadside Nature Reserve that supports Arabis glabra (Tower Mustard).
Corporation Marshes CWS consists of a reedbed interspersed with clumps of scrub. It is drained by a dyke which flows through the area into Falkenham Creek on the eastern side. It is used in winter as a hunting ground by Asio flammeus (Short-eared Owl), Circus cyaneus (Hen Harrier) and Circus aeruginosus (Marsh Harrier).
Playford Mere CWS consists of a number of artificial ponds linked by a series of channels and areas of tall fen vegetation interspersed with Salix sp. (Willow) scrub and Populus sp. (Poplar) plantation. This site is a mosaic of undisturbed habitats which provide a valuable refuge for wildlife particularly birds, in an otherwise intensively-farmed landscape. Good numbers of Ardea cinerea (Heron), Tadorna tadorna (Shelduck), Fulica atra (Coot), Gallinula chloropus (Moorhen) and Aythya fuligula (Tufted Duck) shelter in the tall waterside vegetation which fringes the pond and dykes. Uncommon wetland plants, for example Lythrum salicaria (Purple-loosestrife) and Pulicaria dysenterica (Common Fleabane) are abundant amongst the tall fen community.
Queech Wood CWS is dominated by mature Fraxinus excelsior (Ash) with frequent Quercus sp. (Oak) and Acer campestre (Field Maple) and a dense scrub layer is provided by Corylus avellana (Hazel), Prunus spinosa
330 355 372
415 419
497
599 621
638
641
East Anglia Offshore Wind Limited
Background Data Search Report 854188 (Rev 01)
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