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Project

 
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ARSF - Flight 04/19: Nigg Bay area

Status: Not defined
Publication State: published

Abstract

ARSF project 04/19: The impact of managed retreat for inter-tidal habitat restoration. PI: S. Winterbottom. Site: Nigg Bay.

Abbreviation: ARSF_04_19
Keywords: Not defined

Details

Keywords: Not defined
Previously used record identifiers:
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/view/neodc.nerc.ac.uk__ATOM__activity_1189208136720522

More Information (under review)



Managed retreat (or re-alignment) is becoming increasingly used as an alternative to 'hard' coastal defence and provides the opportunity to restore or create inter-tidal habitats from agricultural land. However, little is known about the rates and spatial variability of habitat restoration, the quality of restored habitats and the factors that affect re-colonisation by invertebrate and avian species. The aim of this project is to use a combination of field and airborne data to assess these key factors at two sites in Scotland. Nigg Bay on the Cromarty Firth is in the very early stages of re-alignment, while the Kincardine and Skinflats mud flats on the Forth Estuary are due to be re-aligned in 2003/2004. The collection of airborne data at such a crucial and early stage of re-alignment will provide a rare opportunity to study the effects of managed retreat in detail. This research is essential for informing future policy and for the management of re-aligned sites so that the best possible quality of restored habitats is achieved.

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