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Red Squirrel |
Poole Harbour Facts
Geography
Poole Harbour is in east Dorset, south of the town of Poole. Its northern side is
largely covered with housing but its western and southern reaches remain a natural
complex of mudflats, saltmarshes, inlets and reedbeds rising to the heaths and grasslands
of the Purbecks. Four rivers, the Frome, the Piddle, the Corfe and the Sherford drain into
Poole Harbour from the west draining to the sea through the constricting headlands of North
and South Haven (Sandbanks and Studland) in the east. There are five larger islands
that provide valuable sanctuaries for some species, especially the red squirrel, which thrives
on three of them.
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Habitats and Wildlife
The Harbour occupies about 3,600 hectares and supports an important
wildlife. The open water, mudflats, marshes and reedbeds and the important Brownsea
Island Lagoon provide valuable habitats for birds. Common and Sandwich terns, shelduck
and little egrets breed here and in the winter thousands of ducks, grebes, divers and
waders, including black and bar tailed godwits, can be found (the Harbour now supports
one of the largest wintering colonies of avocets -1400 in 2002). Reedbeds have bearded
tits and scarce wainscot moths and many plants form unusual vegetation communities around
the shore. Underwater eelgrasses provide food for wintering brent geese, important
estuarine creatures and fish populations flourish in the unpolluted waters, and the spread
and decline of the spartina beds have been the subject of much research.
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Brands Bay
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Furzey and Green Islands
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Conservation
Despite an increasing local human population in the conurbations of
Poole and Bournemouth and a large influx of tourists in the summer the region is still
nationally important for its wildlife and landscape, largely due to the work of
conservationists. The whole area is one of the richest in lowland Britain for diversity
of natural habitats and many important nature reserves such as the RSPB's Arne Reserve,
the National Trust's Studland National Nature Reserve and the Dorset Wildlife Trust's
Brownsea Island Nature Reserve are within a stone's throw of the Harbour waters.
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