Greater Manchester
The river valleys and canals of Greater Manchester allow
wildlife to penetrate the heart of a mainly urban area.
Industry has provided a legacy of reservoirs, canals, subsidence
flashes, railway sidings and industrial wastes, which have been
colonised naturally by plants and animals.
The flashes of the area, formed by mining subsidence, now support
many key species of wildfowl in winter and breeding birds in
summer. The Wigan Flashes are home to major reedbeds and booming
bitterns, one of the UK’s scarcest habitats and rarest breeding
birds.
Pennington Flash and Hope Carr Nature Reserve attract around 50
Gadwall, a rare species of duck, every autumn, whilst since 1992
the county has been a habitat for a small but increasing population
of Black-necked Grebes.
With only around 20 breeding localities in the whole of Britain,
the chance to see this tiny water bird must rank as one of the
region’s ornithological highlights.
The area’s old mill lodges and clay pits support nationally
important populations of Great Crested Newts, whilst the Rochdale
Canal has a population of Floating Water-plantain, a plant of
European importance.