Tuesday, 23 March 2021

A Good Neighbour


Liverpool Echo Environment Award
Our Liverpool Echo Environment Award


In April 2019 the New Ferry Butterfly Park team was awarded the Liverpool Echo Environment Award for the Community Impact category. This award was appropriately sponsored by Merseyrail, our neighbour.
 
The following week Dave Kyle, Merseyrail Electrics Facilities Manager, helped the park on its Opening Day by providing temporary railing up Howell Road to the entrance of the park, splitting up pedestrians from motorised traffic. Just as well, as unknown to Dave, works were happening on the line that day and a JCB came up the road with nearly 1,000 visitors expected that day.

 

The JCB arriving to work on the railway on the same day as the 2019 Open Day
The JCB arriving to work on the railway on the same day as the 2019 Open Day


 

For the day Dave put up a repurposed yellow metal framed Merseyrail poster display cabinet up with a photograph of the NFBP team receiving the award at the Gladstone Isla Conservatory, Stanley Park, Liverpool. This was put on the railings of the fence but slipped down during the year and water got in.

 


The Butterfly Park team receiving the Liverpool Echo Environment Award
The Butterfly Park team receiving the Liverpool Echo Environment Award


Howard Gibson and Peter Miller, New Ferry Butterfly Park volunteers, designed a free standing waterproof frame which was put up outside the main gates of the park in Charlie’s Field. This will give passers-by information about the park’s attractions and forthcoming events. It was a challenge to put up. When digging holes for the uprights a bed of railway sleepers was discovered 50 cm down and the display had to be re-positioned several times so the uprights lay in the gaps between the sleepers.


The new display board outside the Butterfly Park
The new display board outside the Butterfly Park


Merseyrail have helped us several times over the years on opening days, corporate work days, donations of primroses saved from railway works, supporting the planning application for a new a set of spectacular Silver Jubilee Gates and with this display cabinet. They are a good neighbour to the park.


Saturday, 13 March 2021

Natterjack Toads at Red Rocks

 

Natterjack toad
Natterjack toad

Red Rocks Marsh is a Cheshire Wildlife Trust coastal reserve covering 4 hectares of sand dunes, reedbeds and marsh. The reserve lies within the Red Rocks SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest). Open pools support the rare natterjack toad and this is the only breeding colony of natterjack toads in Wirral. This species is extremely limited in Britain and is protected by the 1975 Wild Creatures and Wild Plants Act.


Red Rocks Nature Reserve Red Rocks Nature Reserve information board
Red Rocks Nature Reserve information board


Active management occurs to maintain the breeding pools and monitor both the adult numbers and the toad spawn. This winter the Royal Liverpool Golf Club have cut the natterjack pools and they are looking a nice depth going into spring. A small interpretation panel has been installed next to the natterjack pools. It was paid for through the Tesco funding and the Royal Liverpool Golf Club kindly put it in for us. There will be three panels, changed throughout the year, each explaining what’s happening at that time of the year with the natterjacks. The panel has already attracted the attention of walkers which is good to know.

Aerial view of Red Rocks Nature Reserve
Aerial view of Red Rocks Nature Reserve


RECORD recently published an interesting article about the genetics of this natterjack population and a population at Talacre. We have reproduced this below.


Microsatellite Markers Reveal Inbreeding In Reintroduced Natterjack Toad Populations

By Susie Phillips


Natterjack toad
Natterjack toad


Our latest article is by Susie Phillips, RECORD volunteer and Democracy & Insight Coordinator at the University of Chester. She tells us about her Masters research into Natterjack toads, which included studying a re-introduced population of this charismatic species on the Wirral.

The Natterjack toad (Epidelea calamita) (below left) is distinctive not only in its prominent dorsal stripe and loud nocturnal mating call, but also in its rarity, being found at only a handful of isolated sites in South East England, North West England, East Anglia, North Wales and parts of Scotland.

Following several local extinction events in the 1900s, the Natterjack and its breeding sites were legally protected and a series of reintroduction programmes, using individuals from extant populations alongside various habitat management techniques, took place across the UK in the 1990s. In the north west, spawn strings were taken from Ainsdale, Merseyside (a recognised stronghold for the species) to repopulate both Red Rocks Nature Reserve on the Wirral and Gronant Dunes/Talacre Warren in North Wales, both Sites of Special Scientific Interest within the Dee catchment area.

Following the reintroduction, breeding success was recorded annually by site managers via spawn string counts during the breeding season (April – July). Over the last 20 years, these counts showed interesting fluctuations in population size at both Red Rocks and Talacre but identifying population trends from demographic data alone can be misleading. Therefore, our study aimed to conduct the first genetic analysis of these populations in order to shed light on the genetic diversity of the two reintroduced populations, and to identify any potential conservation actions required to ensure the genetic longevity of the species at these sites.


Collecting natterjack toads for swabbing

Adults were sampled using a non-invasive swabbing technique and nine microsatellite markers (short segments of DNA where the nucleotide sequence repeats) were amplified across the samples to assess genetic variation within each site and for comparison with the Ainsdale source population. We observed a high inbreeding coefficient at both sites, which indicates that individuals within the two populations were more related than would be expected where random mating occurs.

When paired with the observed level of genetic variability (heterozygosity), which is currently lower in the reintroduction sites than it was in the source population at the time of the reintroductions, this indicates that genetic diversity is low in both populations. Indeed, such low genetic diversity has not previously been recorded in any Natterjack population.

Without intervention the two populations are at higher risk of reduced fitness, increased vulnerability to disease and, ultimately, a second extinction event. However, genetic rescue via introducing new breeding individuals to the population and increasing the available breeding habitat via pool creation has been shown to effectively increase genetic diversity within this species. Therefore, with this knowledge, site managers have the opportunity to mitigate for these risks sooner rather than later and safeguard the species at these sites into the future.

You can read the full scientific paper here (open access).