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Café and kiosks closure

On Thursday 18 September, the café and kiosks will be closed to visitors for operational reasons. The rest of the Centre is open as usual. Thank you for your understanding.

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Wildlife sightings for 15th August 2018

1 Whinchat - grazing marsh

1 Green Sandpiper - grazing marsh

1 Redshank - flew over heading SW

2 Peregrine - perched on the hospital

5 Snipe - wader scrape, grazing marsh

5 Common Tern - main lake

7 Swift - reservoir lagoon

1 Grey Wagtail - grazing marsh

Pochard brood of 3 - reservoir lagoon

 

July/early August bird highlights: Green Sandpiper, Common Sandpiper, Avocet, Redshank, Dunlin, Greenshank, Snipe(6), Common Tern(9), Garganey, Peregrine, Red Kite, Buzzard, Hobby, Little Egret(6), Whitethroat, Yellow Wagtail.

Sand Martins had occupied at least 70% of the nest chambers by mid-July. Pochards raised at least 1 brood; Gadwall 4 broods on the reservoir lagoon and scrape; Little Grebe 1 brood on the main lake. Common Terns juveniles appeared, having bred elsewhere but settled here for feeding. Post-breeding migration started up in July with wader species like Common Sandpiper dropping in, as well as Teal, Shoveler, Garganey and Yellow Wagtail.

Flowering plants: (end-July) Bird’s-foot Trefoil, Tufted Vetch, Yellow Loosestrife, Purple Loosestrife, Water Forget-me-not, Monkey Flower, Ragwort, Cat’s-ear, Sow-thistle, Prickly Oxtongue, Smooth Hawk’s-beard, Water Plantain, Figwort, Yarrow, Common Fleabane, Field Scabious, Yellow Bartsia, Brooklime, Marsh Woundwort, Hemp Agrimony, Lady’s Bedstraw, Water Mint, Wild Marjoram, White Water-lily, Redshank, Wild Carrot, Hogweed, Wild Parsnip.

Amphibians: Marsh Frogs calling most sunny days in May/June/July – entrance lake, wildside and south route ponds and pools.

Butterflies/Moths: (end-July survey) Common Blue, Holly Blue, White-letter Hairstreak, Red Admiral, Gatekeeper, Meadow Brown, Peacock, Marbled White, Brimstone, Comma, Green-veined White, Large White, Small White, Essex Skipper, Small Skipper, Large Skipper, Speckled Wood. The July 20th moth trap found 115 species including Jersey Tiger, Hoary Footman, Gold Spot, 6-Spot Burnet and Grey Dagger.

Dragonflies: (mid-July survey) Emperor Dragonfly, Black-tailed Skimmer, Broad-bodied Chaser, Large Red Damselfly, Azure Damselfly, Blue-tailed Damselfly, Common Blue Damselfly, Banded Demoiselle, Red-eyed Damselfly, Lesser Emperor Dragonfly, Brown Hawker, Small Red-eyed Damselfly, Southern Hawker, Migrant Hawker, Common Darter, Ruddy Darter.

Bees: (end-July survey) Common Mini-miner, Large-headed Resin, Patchwork Leafcutter, Yellow Loosestrife, Wool-carder, Green-eyed Flower, Buff-tailed Bumble, Small Garden Bumble, Early Bumble, Red-tailed Bumble, Common Carder, Honey.

Other insects: (end-July survey) Black and Yellow Longhorn Beetle, Green Shield Bug, Dock Bug, Stilt Bug, Roesel’s Bush-cricket, Field Grasshopper, Long-winged Conehead, Lesser Stag Beetle, Summer Chafer, Common Red Soldier Beetle, Swollen-thighed Beetle, False Blister Beetle species, 7-Spot Ladybird, Harlequin Ladybird, 14-Spot Ladybird, Viburnum Leaf Beetle, Willow Leaf Beetle, Garden Spider, Wasp Spider, Nursery Web Spider, Flower Crab Spider.

Reptiles: (July/early August) Juvenile Common Lizards around the benches and bridge timbers or long grass nearby, particularly in wildside

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