River Lambourn - United Kingdom

UK ECN site. The River Lambourn rises near the village of Lambourn in the chalk of the the Berkshire Downs at an altitude of about 152m AOD. It is 26km long and flows through the Kennet Valley in a south-easterly direction to Newbury where it joins the River Kennet at an altitude of about 85m AOD. There is one important tributary, the Winterbourne Stream, which flows into the Lambourn from the north-east, just upstream of Newbury. The sampling site is located at Bagnor in the town of Newbury (population: c. 35,000) at an altitude of about 80m AOD, about 5km above the confluence with the Kennet. The underlying bedrock is chalk, with overlying river gravels. The catchment is mostly rural, with mixed farming as the main industry, and there are extensive decidous woodlands on the catchment boundary. The river forms part of the proposed Kennet and Lambourn floodplain Special Area of Conservation (SAC) under the European Community Habitats Directive. Most of the river is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). Ten kilometres from the source, the river receives input from East Shefford sewage works. There are no other significant inputs upstream of the sampling site and no large conurbations on the catchment above the site. Water quality in the Lambourn is good; the river is classified as General Quality Assessment (GQA) biological class 'b' and chemical class 'A'. The river corridor is notable for reed beds and willow stands and the floodplain provides important feeding grounds for snipe (Gallionago gallionago) and water rail (Rallus aquaticus). There are good extensive gravel spawning areas for salmonids; the river supports one of the best and most productive fisheries for brown trout (Salmo trutta) in the area, with natural populations of grayling (Thymallus thymallus) also present. The Lambourn is in the top 10% for England and Wales for the number of macroinvertebrate families recorded during the GQA survey; five nationally rare species of invertebrates are found associated with the river. Native crayfish (Austropotamobius pallipes) have not been recorded in the catchment in recent years, although they are present in the Kennet downstream. Populations of the introduced American signal crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus) are present.

Identifier
Source https://deims.org/1f9511d8-d7da-4fe4-be32-4ceae9e9660e
Related Identifier https://deims.org/api/sites/1f9511d8-d7da-4fe4-be32-4ceae9e9660e
Related Identifier https://deims.org/geoserver/deims/wms?service=WMS&version=1.1.0&request=GetMap&layers=deims:deims_all_sites&styles=&bbox=-180,-90,180,90&width=768&height=363&srs=EPSG:4326&format=application/openlayers
Metadata Access https://deims.org/pycsw/catalogue/csw?service=CSW&version=2.0.2&request=GetRecordById&Id=1f9511d8-d7da-4fe4-be32-4ceae9e9660e&outputSchema=http://www.isotc211.org/2005/gmd
Provenance
Creator Andrew Sier [Primary ECN contact]
Publisher <bound method ISO19139Reader._publisher of <mdingestion.reader.iso19139.ISO19139Reader object at 0x7f2cb8866160>>
Contributor DEIMS-SDR Site and Dataset registry deims.org
Publication Year 2012
Rights No conditions apply to access and use; no limitations to public access
OpenAccess true
Contact arjs(at)ceh.ac.uk
Representation
Version 3.2.1
Discipline Environmental Monitoring
Spatial Coverage (-1.660W, 51.408S, -1.300E, 51.576N)