Fen Drayton Lakes
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| Fen Drayton Lakes, Cambridgeshire | |
|---|---|
Fen Drayton nature reserve | |
| Location | Cambridgeshire |
| Coordinates | 52°18′29″N 0°02′13″W / 52.308°N 0.037°W |
| Type | Lakes |
| Basin countries | United Kingdom |
| Surface area | 267 acres (1.08 km2) |
| Max. depth | 5 m (16 ft) |
Fen Drayton Lakes is a complex of lakes, lagoons, ponds and a river, situated close to Fen Drayton, Holywell and Swavesey in Cambridgeshire, England. The complex was formerly a gravel extraction site until 1992 when gravel production ceased and the pits were allowed to flood to provide a nature reserve and bird sanctuary.
- Fen Drayton Lakes
- Ferry lagoon
- Fen Drayton information display
- RSPB bird hide
All the waters on the complex were created in the process of gravel extraction site which started in 1953 and continued until 1992 when gravel production ceased.[1] The extraction pits naturally filled with water and preserved as a nature reserve and RSPB bird sanctuary.[2] The complex consists of 12 waters; Drayton Fen (90 acres (36 ha)), Ferry lagoon (160 acres (65 ha)), Ferry pond, Ferry mere, Holywell lake, Swavesey lake (30 acres (12 ha)), Oxholme Lake, Moore Lake, Far Fen lake, Elney Lake, Trout pond, Springhill lagoon, located alongside the River Great Ouse.[3]
Bird species
Since the extraction of gravel began in 1953, at least 213 species have been recorded in the area with some 65 species being regular breeders. Recent bird species sighted include barn owl, bittern, blackcap, honey buzzard, common crane, cormorant, great egret, little egret, red-footed falcon, black-headed gull, goldeneye, marsh harrier, purple heron, hobby, glossy ibis, kingfisher, sanderling, snipe, starling, bearded tit, Cetti's warbler, reed warbler, willow warbler, and whiskered tern.[4][2][5]