Index  ›  world  ›  BBC
world · BBC ↗

Thurrock voles move to new River Colne home

BBC Published Jun 9, 2010 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Conservationists are moving 300 voles 50 miles away.
300 voles · voles50 miles · distance
Conservationists, conservationists
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
More than 50,000 animals have already been moved from the site.
more than 50000 animals · animals
Conservationists, conservationists
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
DP World is the developer of the £1.5bn London Gateway port.
1.5 bn · port
DP World, developer
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
DP World is spending £50m on measures including breaching a 975ft (300m) sea wall later this year.
50 m · measures975 ft · sea wall300 m · sea wall
DP World, developer
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Water vole numbers in England have declined by more than 90%.
more than 90 percent · water vole numbers
Darren Tansley, Essex Wildlife Trust
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The voles will be released at Fordham Hall Estate, a 500-acre Woodland Trust site.
500 acres · site
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The river has been surveyed for at least two decades.
at least 2 decades · survey period
Darren Tansley, Essex Wildlife Trust
View source ↗

Hundreds of water voles who live on the site where a container ship terminal is to be built in Essex are to be relocated to a new riverside habitat.

Conservationists are moving the 300 rodents away from Thurrock to the River Colne, near Colchester, 50 miles away.

More than 50,000 animals, including rare species like great-crested newts, have already been moved from the site.

New wetland is being created as part of the building of the port to compensate for habitat lost to the development.

DP World, the developer of the £1.5bn London Gateway port, is planning to meet obligations under EU law by creating new habitat for wildlife.

The company is spending £50m on measures such as turning farmland into new tidal habitat to attract wading and migrating birds by breaching a 975ft (300m) sea wall later this year.

Grass snakes and adders have had to be moved to new habitat and now water vole trapping has started under licence from the Natural England.

The voles, now in temporary homes at sanctuaries, had to be trapped outside the main breeding season to avoid capturing females and leaving their young abandoned in nests.

They will be released at several sites, including Fordham Hall Estate, a 500-acre Woodland Trust site on the River Colne.

Darren Tansley, from Essex Wildlife Trust, said water vole numbers in England had declined by more than 90% in recent years as a result of habitat destruction and attacks by mink.

He added that voles had vanished from the River Colne in the past few years.

Mr Tansley said: "The river has been surveyed for at least two decades and we have watched water voles decline and become extinct mainly because of mink.

"We've got the mink down to virtually zero - we have virtually wiped them out from the catchment - and it is now safe for the voles to come back to the river."

He added that moving a coastal population of water voles inland would also save them from sea level rises and coastal development.

The habitat along the Colne was mostly very good and it was a "perfect water vole river".

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error