Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust is going to restore over 50 hectares (128 acres) at Bourne North Fen; meeting 30% of the Nature Strategy for Lincolnshire target for this endangered fenland habitat; and turning it into a home for a wide variety of wildlife including bittern and greater water parsnip.
A Biffa Award grant of £750,000 has enabled the Wildlife Trust to purchase the land, which will link up with important wild places nearby, including the Wildlife Trust’s Willow Tree Fen, the first place where cranes have nested in Lincolnshire for 400 years.
Former farmland at Bourne North Fen will be transformed into a wet-fenland; South Lincolnshire is one of the driest areas in the UK, but also one with a high flood risk. How water is managed in this landscape is critical. Bourne North Fen will help regulate water supply during shortages and absorb floodwaters in times of spate. A new system of reedbeds will improve the quality of the Bourne Eau river before it enters the River Glen and increasing amounts of carbon will be captured by the wetland soils and plant life.
Creating a healthy wetland will support a rich diversity of wildlife including rare species that once flourished in the Fens such as bittern, common crane, bearded tit, greater water parsnip, European eel and spined loach.