Fens Pools

Fens Pools (grid reference SO920886) is a 37.6 hectare (92.9 acre) biological site of Special Scientific Interest in the West Midlands. The site was notified in 1989.[1] under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and is currently managed by the Country Trust.

Fens Pools
Site of Special Scientific Interest
Middle Pool
Area of SearchWest Midlands
Grid referenceSO920886
InterestBiological
Area37.6 hectares
Notification1989
Location mapEnglish Nature

History

The pools, which consist of Grove Pool, Middle Pool and Fens Pool, were originally constructed by the Stourbridge Canal Company. The canal was opened in 1779,[2] and the lake reservoirs fed into a navigable branch which joined the canal's main line at Leys Junction, close to the top of the Stourbridge Flight of 16 locks, through which the level of the canal falls by 145 feet (44.2m).[3] The reservoirs formed the main source of water supply for these locks, until it was supplemented by water leaving the Dudley Canal, with which the Stourbridge Canal made an end-on junction in 1792.[3]

Location

The area is situated between Pensnett and Brierley Hill in the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley. It forms part of the larger Buckpool and Fens Pool Local Nature Reserve.[4]

Wildlife

The site includes open water, swamps, fens and flood vegetation, unimproved grassland and scrub. It is the best place in the West Midlands for amphibians, with the common frog, common toad, smooth newt and great crested newt breeding here,[1] this site having the largest population of great crested newts in the West Midlands.[5] As well as a variety of grasses and sedges, there are mare’s-tail, common club-rush, orange foxtail and lesser water-parsnip. Some unimproved natural grassland shows signs of ancient ridge and furrow cultivation and supports the rare adder’s-tongue fern. At least ten species of dragonfly have been observed here, and over twenty species of butterfly.[1]

Birds that breed here include the reed warbler, the sedge warbler, the lesser whitethroat and the great crested grebe, and sometimes the little ringed plover.[1] The pools provide a large expanse of open water, and form an important habitat for over-wintering and migrating birds. Shovelers and gadwalls can regularly be seen, while bitterns have also been observed.[5]

gollark: Sell it to the biters, obviously.
gollark: A useful trick for defensive walls is that you can use combinations of walls and transport belts to slow biters.
gollark: Add more turrets then.
gollark: It's still not enough.
gollark: Oh, you need more iron. Of course you do.

See also

References

  1. Fens Pools English Nature. Retrieved on 25 March 2020
  2. Jim Shead's Waterways History: Stourbridge Canal
  3. Nicholson Waterways Guide, Volume 2 (2006), Harper Collins Publishing Ltd, ISBN 0-00-721110-4
  4. "Buckpool, Fens Pools and Barrow Hill Nature Reserves". www.dudley.gov.uk. Dudley MBC. Retrieved 25 March 2020.
  5. Dudley MB Council Parks and Nature Reserves Archived 8 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine

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