Overview
Communities
Nature
Heritage
Events and Activities
Volunteer
Community
Explore
Local Highlights
Partnership Projects
Connecting Communities
Culture and heritage
Natural capital refers to the resources provided by our natural environment. This includes water, soil, geology and all living things.
Ecosystem services refers to the benefits these resources give us. This includes the food we eat, water we drink, building materials and medicines.
We refer to our natural capital as ‘stocks’ and the ecosystem services as ‘flows’
To find opportunities to restore nature, we need to understand what we have and where. We have mapped the habitats and land cover – our ‘natural capital’ – within the Transforming the Trent Valley study area. Here, you can explore the area’s habitats (the natural capital ‘stock’), the benefits we get from them (the ‘flows’ or ecosystem services) and the economic benefits they give us (their ‘value’), for example, in terms of avoided health care or water treatment costs.
You can view the storymap on a larger screen to open it in a new tab making it easier to explore.
There is a tab for each of ‘Stock’, ‘Flows’ and ‘Value’. Click on each one to explore the natural capital, ecosystem services and economic benefits in the Trent Valley.
There are further tabs for ‘Projects’ and ‘Opportunities’. Projects provides information about the different projects we are delivering as part of the Transforming the Trent Valley landscape scheme. Opportunities highlights areas where we have identified opportunities for future projects that we hope to explore.
Each tab has an ‘about’ box providing more information. You can close this at any point by clicking the and reopen it by clicking on the icon.
The map will centre on Burton-upon-Trent and you can zoom in and out or pan to view the whole landscape, or focus in on a specific area.
A legend to the map can be opened by clicking and some data can be turned on and off to show different layers by clicking – use the check boxes to select different layers of information.
To discover more information about land use, click on the shape on the map and an information box will appear.