Water management in Borgfelder Wümmewiesen
About this good practice
The Borgfelder Wümmewiesen are one of Bremen's largest nature protection sites (689 ha) and are the only nature protection site in Bremen of national representative meaningfulness. The Borgfelder Wümmewiesen are a regularly flooded floodplain landscape on carbon-rich soils. Wide, extensively farmed meadows and pastures, crisscrossed by ditches and dotted with still waters, characterize its appearance. The floodplain is used by local farmers as pastureland or for haymaking. The cultural landscape is home to many animal and plant species worthy of protection. Being also the oldest large nature protection site (1987), there is long-standing experience in actively managing the water level, including complete flooding in winter, thereby reducing carbon emissions from peat soils while achieving biodiversity conservation goals at the same time.
Nature conservation measures since 1987 include the restoration of ditches, the creation of small bodies of water, and relocating the summer dyke to connect 25 hectares to the Wümme as a floodplain. The water level has been actively managed since the 1990s. Two dam keepers (an ornithologist and a farmer) operate the dam in close consultation with the supervising foundation nordwest natur (ger.: Stiftung Nordwest Natur) and the nature conservation authority. Recent years have shown that changing climate conditions (and water regimes) are a fundamental challenge and require further adaptation.
Resources needed
Mainly: (i) Financial resources to purchase land and capacity for close coordination with landowners. (ii) Investments to adapt the water system (restoration of ditches, creation of small bodies of water, relocating dykes to reconnect the floodplain to the water flow). (iii) Operation of dams.
Evidence of success
For each management objective -- (i) biodiversity conservation (e.g. rare meadow birds), (ii) carbon sequestration (peat soils), (iii) agricultural use (cultural landscape) -- there are indicators of sucess. This includes extraordinary high breeding sucess of very rare meadow birds (e.g. snipe) and populations of very rare plant species (e.g. cuckoo pink), reduced carbon emissions from peat soils and and ongoing semi-intensive agricultural use of parts of the site.
Potential for learning or transfer
In principle, there are trade-offs and synergies between the three management objectives: (i) biodiversity conservation (e.g., rare meadow birds), (ii) carbon sequestration (peat soils), and (iii) agricultural use (cultural landscape). Carefully targeted water management allows for leveraging synergies. In many places in Europe, however, this will first mean creating the necessary conditions by adapting and renaturalizing heavily modified watercourses and ditches, reconnecting floodplains, and installing technical measures to control water levels.
Further information
Good practice owner
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