Water

Chalk streams: why ‘England’s rainforests’ are so rare and precious

England’s chalk streams support a wide variety of biodiversity; but anthropogenic pressures are destroying these icons of English culture

 
By Rachel Stubbington, Kieran J Gething, Tim Sykes
Published: Monday 03 January 2022
The River Misbourne in the Chitern Hills in England. Photo: istock__

The world has fewer than 300 chalk streams — and England has most of them. These streams occur only where chalk bedrock meets the Earth’s surface, making them globally rare.

Their stable, cool, nutrient-rich waters allow chalk streams to support an exceptionally high number of species — so much so that these habitats are sometimes described as “England’s rainforests”.

Sadly, although some teem with life, the health of England’s chalk streams is threatened by a wide range of human activities. As a result, many of the country’s — and thus the world’s — chalk streams are not reaching their ecological potential.

In their flowing reaches, wild trout and grayling can patrol oxygen-rich riffles and pools, hunting for the aquatic juveniles of mayflies and other insects. Kingfishers loom on branches above, occasionally diving beneath the surface in blue-and-orange bolts to snatch unsuspecting minnows.

Elusive mammals, including otters and water voles, sometimes swim alongside lush beds of submerged plants, such as water crowfoot, whose flowers are held expectantly above the water’s surface, attracting bees and other pollinating insects in summer.

A freshwater stream with green beds of plants with white flowers.
Water crowfoot blooms in the Bourne Rivulet. Tim Sykes, Author provided

In their headwaters, these streams can naturally disappear during the summer, leaving their channels dry. Our research has shown that dry channels are often bustling with land-based insects, including some species which are nationally rare.

Their waters reappear in winter and so the streams are known locally as winterbournes. As these streams naturally shift between wet and dry conditions, they allow aquatic and terrestrial species to share one habitat at different times.

A large brown beetle climbing over pebbles.
The dry channels of winterbourne chalk streams support species such as this ground beetle. Roy Anderson, Author provided

Specialists including the winterbourne stonefly are rarely found in perennial streams but are common in winterbourne chalk streams. Their different life stages are carefully timed to coincide with the stream’s fluctuations between wet and dry. Juvenile insects develop in water then emerge as flying adults before the dry phase starts.

Beneath the chalk stream itself, in the cold darkness of the underlying aquifers, blind, colourless crustaceans live hidden away, quietly contributing to the ecosystem’s biodiversity.

Their subterranean lifestyle has enabled these ancient Britons to survive for tens of millions of years through successive periods of glaciation that have caused the extinction of other freshwater animals.

A translucent shrimp suspended in water on a black background.
An eyeless, colourless shrimp captured beneath a winterbourne chalk stream. Chris Proctor, Author provided
Blue mood

What makes chalk streams so special? It all begins beneath our feet. Rainwater drains deep into the chalk landscape of southern and eastern England, forming underground aquifers.

Filtered by the chalk, the groundwater springs forth in gin-clear, nutrient-rich streams which support photosynthetic plants and microorganisms — the fuel for food webs that feed everything from grazing insects to predatory fish, birds and mammals.

Chalk streams benefit people, too. To catch a wild brown trout from an English chalk stream is the dream of many a discerning fly fisher. In addition, your physical and mental wellbeing can be enhanced simply by spending time near rivers and streams.

Winterbourne chalk streams are special. Our research reveals the deep emotional connection that people can have with these unique environments. Some report experiencing changes in their mood, shifting from sadness to hope and joy, which align with the stream’s seasonal transitions between dry and wet phases.

The threat from pollution

Many chalk aquifers — the source of chalk streams — are sadly polluted by nitrogen and phosphorus from fertilisers spread on farmland. The seemingly clear waters of chalk streams are often tainted with invisible contaminants as a result.

As they flow downstream, water running off urban and rural areas adds other pollutants, including fine sediments and pesticides. Sewage also affects the quality of water in many chalk streams.

The natural courses taken by many, perhaps even most, chalk streams in England have been straightened and rerouted to make space for agricultural, urban and industrial land uses. Many are dwindling to a trickle as water companies take water from both streams and the aquifers beneath them.

A shallow, green valley with buildings on either side.
An urban chalk stream whose natural form has been heavily modified. Chloe Hayes, Author provided

These effects add up and are compounded by climate change. As a result, the Environment Agency reports that not one of England’s rivers — chalk or otherwise — is in good overall health.

A strategy for restoring England’s chalk streams was published in October 2021. Welcomed by the Environment Agency and Natural England, it recommends granting chalk streams new statutory protection that reflects their globally unique value to ecology and culture. Radical action is needed to better protect our chalk streams and ensure these ecosystems remain worthy of their iconic status.The Conversation

Rachel Stubbington, Professor in River Ecology, Nottingham Trent University; Kieran J. Gething, PhD Candidate in Ecology, Nottingham Trent University, and Tim Sykes, PhD Candidate in Environmental Biosciences, University of Southampton

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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