Features of National Nature Reserves
The diversity and wealth of wildlife, geology
and cultural heritage on an NNR can be bewildering. So on each
site, CCW identifies a limited number of special ‘features’ which
have the highest conservation priority. This enables the Reserve
Manager to effectively target practical work and monitoring.
Acid woodland at Coed Camlyn
NNR, Gwynedd.
© CCW
An NNR feature can be:
- A special habitat, such as Wet Woodland or
Saltmarsh;
- A rare or characteristic species such as
Golden plover or Juniper;
- An assemblage of related plants or
animals occurring together, for example, a Lichen Assemblage;
- A geological or geomorphological
feature;
- An archaeological feature, such as a
Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Biodiversity and Earth science features are
selected on the following basis:
- They are notified SSSI features (national importance);
- They are designated SAC or SPA features
(European importance);
- They are other features of more local
importance.
Analysis of features on NNRs
Cliff ledge vegetation at Cwm
Idwal NNR, Snowdonia. © CCW
Overall, there are 252 different features
represented in the NNR series, as shown in the table below.
The average NNR has 8 features (3 habitat
features and 5 species features including assemblages). However,
there is considerable variation between sites: Morfa Dyffryn has
the most features with 31 (3 habitats and 28 species), while Coed
Gorswen has only one habitat feature.
The following table shows the total number
of features on NNRs (some features appear on a number of
sites).
|
Feature types |
No of different
features on
all NNRs |
Total no of
features on
all NNRs |
| Habitats |
78 |
231 |
| Plant species |
93 |
121 |
| Animal species |
66 |
95 |
| Assemblages of species |
12 |
98 |
| Earth science features |
14 |
35 |
| Archaelogical features |
2 |
102 |
| Total |
265 |
682 |