Frampton Pools
| Site of Special Scientific Interest | |
|
Great crested grebe with young (Podiceps cristatus) | |
![]() Location within Gloucestershire | |
| Area of Search | Gloucestershire |
|---|---|
| Grid reference | SO753073 |
| Coordinates | 51°45′51″N 2°21′31″W / 51.764283°N 2.358584°WCoordinates: 51°45′51″N 2°21′31″W / 51.764283°N 2.358584°W |
| Interest | Biological |
| Area | 59.84 hectare |
| Notification | 1974 |
| Natural England website | |
Frampton Pools (grid reference SO753073) is a 59.84-hectare (147.9-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Gloucestershire, notified in 1974.[1][2]
The site is in the Severn Vale and consists of a number of lakes created as a result of gravel extraction. These provide a good open water habitat which is important for wintering wildfowl. The site is mostly standing water which is surrounded by broadleaved woodland, scrub and the margins support marginal vegetation.[1]
Species
The over-wintering birds include large numbers of mallard, teal, shoveler, pochard, tufted duck and pintail. Rarer species also visit such as smew and scaup. The lakes are used as a breeding area for tufted duck, mallard and great crested grebe.[1]
It is a good area for invertebrates, notably dragonflies.[1]
References
SSSI sources
- Natural England SSSI information on the citation
- Natural England SSSI information on the Frampton Pools units
External links
- Natural England (SSSI information)
