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Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) home page | Sponsored by Welsh Assembly Government

Countryside Council for Wales
Landscape & wildlife

Management & restoration

Freshwater habitats are delicate environments, often harder to care for than land habitats. To help drive the conditions that keep them in pristine order, there exists a constant thirst for a steady supply of clean fresh water - a need that must be satisfied on time, and delivered to order. Threats from humanity, pollution and invasive species mean that – once the damage is done – recovery can be a slow and painstaking process.

For example, rivers depend on winter flooding to scour away silt. Sharp rises in river level encourage migratory fish to move upstream. Low water levels are also important – plants such as bladderwort and floating water plantain flower during these drier periods. Freshwater dynamics are complex - shifting and shivering within the year.

All freshwater habitats are fed by rainfall from the surrounding land. The rainfall may run directly into streams, or it can percolate slowly, patiently sifting through soil and porous rocks and entering rivers and lakes as groundwater.

During this process it dissolves or mixes with many other substances. Mopping up minerals and nutrients from the soil, oils from road surfaces, tannins from leaf matter and particles of debris and silt.

This means that the water in our rivers and lakes effectively mirrors the use of the surrounding landscape. 

As ever, human activities such as water abstraction, sewage discharge, flood defence, recreation and fisheries all have direct effects on the aquatic environment. Whilst other major threats exist in diffuse pollution and invasive species.

Once they have been damaged, restoring freshwaters is often expensive, and can take a great deal of time and careful effort.

Many upland lakes and rivers are still suffering the ecological effects of acid rain that fell in the 1970s and 1980s, and may take a century to recover fully.

Some are also contaminated by heavy metals such as copper, lead and tin – a legacy of the long history of metal mining in Wales.

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Postal address
The habitats and species team
C/O Enquiries
CCW
Maes-y-Ffynnon
Penrhosgarnedd
Bangor
Gwynedd
LL57 2DW
Telephone number
0845 1306229
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