Archive for the ‘Urban Action Group’ Category

Report of Annual Partnership Meeting 2009

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

The Tees Valley Biodiversity Partnership held their 2009 Annual Gathering on 9th September at the Teesmouth Field Centre, followed by a tour of Saltholme RSPB Reserve by Assistant Reserves Manager Toby Collett.

The meeting was kindly sponsored by the Tees Valley Joint Strategy Unit.

Below is the programme of the day and copies of PowerPoint presentations of some the speakers.

Programme

I love NI197

Jeremy Garside – Tees Valley Wildlife Trust

Securing a future for the lost meadows of eastern Cleveland
Helen Herring -  Wildflower Ark

From EYE to ERIC – Working towards a regional biological records centre

Naomi Hewitt  – EYE Project

Biodiversity – from regional policy to local delivery
Malcolm Steele – Joint Strategy Unit

Newts and recycling – An example of a risk management project in Redcar and Cleveland

Jo Fearey – Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council

Urban cowslips – a successful example of urban meadow creation  in Albert Park, Middlesbrough
Francine Marshall – Middlesbrough Council

Tees Valley Pondscape – following a summer of pond survey, pond creation and management sites are planned for this winter
Rachel Jackson – Tees Valley Wildlife Trust

Biodiversity boost for Ponds in the Tees Valley

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Ponds and aquatic wildlife throughout the Tees Valley will be receiving a boost by the Tees Valley Biodiversity Partnership. The partnership’s Tees Valley “Pondscape” initiative has just been awarded one hundred and two thousand pound from DEFRA’s Countdown 2010 fund toward a two hundred thousand project.

The project will address the loss and fragmentation of ponds in the rural, industrial and urban landscapes of the Tees Valley. Ponds will be rigorously mapped and surveyed to produce a pondscape picture of the Tees Valley. This will be used to strategically create ponds and carry out practical habitat management to ensure that ponds provide habitats for pond creatures such as frogs, toads and newts.

Ponds are now a UK priority habitat because they are vital for aquatic insects, birds and mammals but have been rapidly disappearing from our landscape. This has been mirrored in the Tees Valley with changes in farming practises resulting in the neglect of many farms and ponds being drained in urban areas to make way for developments.

Malcolm Steele of the Joint Strategy Unit and chairman of the Tees Valley Biodiversity Partnership says “This landscape scale project will be a real boost to the Tees Valley Biodiversity Action Plan. It will enable us to pinpoint where the best ponds for wildlife are in the Tees Valley and to focus efforts on creating and caring for ponds to ensure that generations to come have ponds that are thriving with wildlife”.

A summary of the Tees Valley Pondscape project plan can be downloaded here

tees-valley-pondscape-project-summary-061008

Urban Action Group notes of January 2008

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Click here to read notes for the Urban Action Group’s meeting in January 2008

Urban Action Group notes of November 2007

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

Click here to read notes for the Urban Action Group’s meeting in November 2007

Tees Valley Wildlife Trust

Margrove Heritage Centre, Margrove Park, Boosbeck, Saltburn, TS12 3BZ

e-mail: santrobus@teeswildlife.org