Essex & Suffolk Water’s (ESW) primary objective is to maintain the role of the Trinity Broads as a potable water supply and to improve the water quality of this resource. As a private water company, ESW are also obliged to maintain the recreational use and conservation value of the area.
Following the purchase of the majority of the Trinity Broads by Essex & Suffolk Water (ESW) in 1995, a partnership with the Broads Authority, Environment Agency and Natural England was formed to manage the area. This group, along with the local community and broad users, have worked together to develop an overall management plan of the area.
The Trinity Broads area has remained an important site for wildlife due to its relatively undisturbed nature; it is important to employ sympathetic management in the area and ensure recreational activity remains at its current, relatively low, level.
ESW provides funding for a Catchment Officer who is responsible for the management of conservation and recreational activities on the site and for working with neighbouring landowners to maintain good water quality in the broads.
Regular meetings and communication with local parish councils and environmental groups keep local interested parties up-to-date with current issues in the Trinity Broads catchment area.
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| Trinity Broads newsletter 2008 |
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• Bat tracking and surveys at Ormesby Broad.
• Fish surveys.
• Aquatic macrophytes surveyed throughout the summer.
• Desmoulin’s Whorl snails surveyed.
• WeBS bird counts throughout the area.
Managing fish populations is vital in helping the recovery of aquatic plants in the broads. Water fleas can then graze on algae without as much danger of being eaten by fish; this keeps the water clearer and encourages the aquatic plants to thrive.Eutrophication has been an increasing problem in rivers and lakes throughout England since the 1930s but as the Trinity Broads are isolated from the River Bure they remain free from the severe effects of this problem. However, surface run-off of nitrates from surrounding arable land and possible phosphate leaching from adjacent properties with septic tanks present sources of possible nutrient loading in the system. The Trinity Broads Project aims to address this issue by working more closely with local farmers and business owners throughout the catchment area