The charity has launched a Senedd petition calling for a halt to significant development on these nationally important wetlands until formal protection is in place.
In support of the campaign, Iolo says, “The Gwent Levels are gloriously beautiful, rich in biodiversity, and utterly irreplaceable. There is a very clear danger that developments of all kinds could fragment this wonderful, wildlife-rich area, resulting in a reduction in all-important habitats, which would have a hugely detrimental impact on many vulnerable species. These fragile wetlands need to be properly protected as a matter of urgency, as it is of huge value to humankind as well as wildlife.
In order to safeguard this amazingly rich mosaic of habitats, supporting some incredibly rare species, I would ask you to please sign Gwent Wildlife’s Trusts’ two petitions to help secure the future of this special landscape.”
Gwent Wildlife Trust owns reserves throughout the region, and includes meadows, ancient woodland in the Wye Valley, and unspoilt upland tracts of habitat. One of the trust’s flagship reserves is Magor Marsh on the Gwent Levels.
Magor Marsh is one of the last remaining pieces of natural fenland that once covered the Levels. Wetlands like this were once commonplace across Britain but they are now one of the UK’s most threatened habitats. It was the threat of losing this important place in the 1960s that brought local naturalists together to fight for its survival, banding together to form what is now known as the Gwent Wildlife Trust. More recently, Barecroft Common was added to the reserve along with neighbouring Bridewell Common, extending this important habitat for the benefit of the natural world.
The Gwent Levels provide a mosaic of habitats that nurture a rich diversity of wildlife throughout the year. The distinctive, familiar but increasingly rare sound of cuckoo calling heralds the fact that spring is in full swing, while the reeds and scrub house the elusive Cetti’s Warbler, its wonderful call piercing the air. In summer, wildflowers carpet the meadows, and the air is full of insects as they feed on the nectar-rich flowers. As autumn approaches, it’s the best time to see a brilliant flash of colour as kingfishers dart along the waterways. Flocks of teal and shoveler make the ponds their winter home. Throughout the year, the waterways known as reens are frequented by water voles (one of the UK's fastest declining mammals) and otters.
Gwent Wildlife Trust CEO, Adam Taylor, adds, “The Gwent Levels are an ancient landscape, rich in culture and important for biodiversity, recreation, flood alleviation, carbon storage and food production. They are now facing multiple, adjacent, enormous solar proposals and business parks as well as other development projects. The Welsh planning system in its present form is unable to control such development, and the destruction which these would cause under present arrangements would mean the end of this beautiful, fragile and complex wetland. So, we are calling for a halt to significant development and a coherent, legally binding plan put in place for the protection of this spectacular wetland and the wildlife it supports.
“We need to stress that we are not opposed to solar energy, simply that such developments need to be located on land where they will not irretrievably damage a nationally important and designated landscape, teeming with wildlife. We have already seen the damage caused by the existing solar plant on the Gwent Levels, where a hugely important lapwing breeding site was destroyed.”
Below is the plea from Gwent Wildlife Trust to everyone who loves this special landscape.