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13 June 2014
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Islands - Anglesey


Dunes at Newborough Warren

Anglesey sits off the north coast of Wales in view of Snowdonia National Park, and sports many nature reserves and wildlife attractions.

Dune environment at Newborough Warren in Anglesey.


One of the biggest and best reserves on the island is a massive dune system called Newborough Warren.

This national nature reserve attracts thousands of visitors each year because of its beautiful beaches and views of the sea and Snowdonia.

Rocky foundations

In the geological period known as the Cambrian, much of Wales lay under a tropical Ocean peppered with volcanic islands.

Evidence of underwater volcanic activity can be seen today on the neck of Llanddwyn Island in the form of pillow lavas.

Red hot blobs of magna cooled rapidly when forced out of underwater volcanoes.

Successive blobs fell onto previously cooled blobs, creating distinctive bumpy pillow-like forms.

Waders and wildfowl

Today Newborough is home to plants and invertebrates which specialise in the dune environment.

There are large expanses of both active and fixed dunes, although many of the latter have been afforested, along with a freshwater lake, saltmarsh and mudflats and a tidal island.

The inter-tidal mudflats and salt marshes are important wintering grounds for waders and wildfowl regularly supporting over 1% of the British population of Pintail.

Ynys yr Adar, near Ynys Llanddwyn, supports over 1% of the British breeding population of Cormorant.

Sand dunes

Newborough Warren dunesIn the 13th Century the Newborough area was a region of rich farmlands and a prosperous town.

It was populated by residents who had been evicted from Llanfaes, in the north of the island, by Edward I.

However, in the 14th Century a series of extremely violent storms buried a large portion of this area under sand dunes.

The fears of the residents that the dunes would completely swallow the town prompted Queen Elizabeth I to enact a law protecting the marram grass, the roots of which help to stabilise the dunes.

This stopped the advance of the dunes and also provided raw material for a new industry in the town, the weaving of the marram grass leaves to form mats.

Rabbit colonisation

Rabbits soon colonised the dunes, giving the area the name Newborough Warren.

This provided the residents with another valuable resource, as over 100,000 rabbits a year were taken from the warren.

The reduction of the rabbit population through forestry plantation and the myxomytosis epidemic of the 1950's allowed the vegetation on the dunes to spread.

Today, besides the marram grass (Ammophila arenaria), the warren is vegetated by a wide range of interesting plants.

Wild life haven

On the dunes themselves, plants such as Dune Pansies, Sea Spurge, and Sand Cat's-Tail grow alongside the marram grass.

Between the dunes, in the marshy hollows called the slacks, a rich flora can be found composed of Creeping Willow and a variety of orchids including the Marsh Orchid, along with Butterwort, Grass of Parnassus and Yellow Bird's-Nest.

Birds common to the dunes include Herring Gulls, Oystercatchers, Lapwings, Curlew, Skylarks and Meadow Pipits.

The dunes are also home to an abundance of toads and lizards as well as insects.

Newborough Warren is part of a National Nature Reserve, which also includes Llanddwyn Island.

Red Squirrel haven

Red SquirrelThe Red Squirrel is largely extinct in Wales apart from a few locations such as on Anglesey where a reintroduction project has created a safe haven.

The Anglesey Red Squirrel Project has been a driving force in boosting numbers.

The Red Squirrel used to be common on Anglesey but with the arrival of Greys in the 1970's, numbers dropped to only 40 by 1998.

The Project started a grey eradication project and a reintroduction of reds.

The Red Squirrels live in the depths of the forest so the young don't become habituated to humans and will remain truly wild.

The squirrels that have been released are very hard to see but that doesn't put people coming to try to find them.

In fact, they've become the superstars of Anglesey's wildlife and spotting them is a real thrill.

Bird watchers' paradise

Raven c/o RSPB ImagesBeing sandy the beach at Newborough is not nearly so good for finding shells - but it does make for good bird watching.

The real birding highlight at Newborough is not the wading birds, it is the Ravens.

As evening approaches, Newborough plays hosts to a Raven spectacular when the birds return after a day of scavenging.

At its peak four years ago the roost had 2,000 ravens, making it the second largest in the world.

Now the number at Newborough, still one of the largest in the UK, has fallen to 800.

The Ravens have also set up satellite roosts in two other areas of the island - Mynydd Bodafon and Pentraeth.

The roosts have a high density of birds, although it's unclear why they roost in such numbers.

The Raven is known to be a very intelligent bird and it's thought that they use the roost as an information centre for passing news about where to go and feed.

Photo credits

Raven images copyright and courtesy of RSPB Images.

 

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