Overview
Communities
Nature
Heritage
Events and Activities
Volunteer
Community
Explore
Local Highlights
Partnership Projects
Connecting Communities
Culture and heritage
Natural heritage refers to all living organisms and the interactions between them that make up an ecosystem. It also includes the changes that humans have made because people have been changing the landscape for millennia. Our interactions with nature and our management of the land have uniquely shaped the natural habitats that remain.
Biodiversity refers to the number of species and the number of individuals within each species that are present. The greater the variety of species the greater the stability of the ecosystem and the better it will function for all life.
The benefits that arise from the natural process of a healthy and biodiverse habitat are called ecosystem services. These include factors such as water quality, air quality, soil health, flood risk management and carbon sequestration, where carbon is removed from the atmosphere.
You can find out more about the Natural Capital and Ecosystem services of the Trent Valley by exploring our Storymap here.
We aim to help restore the biodiversity and natural processes of the headwaters of the River Trent. The headwaters include the main river and all its tributaries that flow through Stoke-on-Trent, Newcastle-under-Lyme and Biddulph. We can do this through restoring the natural river processes, such as the shape of the river channel and banks, how it flows, and its water quality. We can also restore or enhance the associated habitats, including those within the floodplain.
The headwaters of a river are where the water first rises, known as its source. The water of the River Trent rises near Biddulph Moor in Staffordshire.
Management of a river’s headwaters and associated habitats has a significant impact upon biodiversity as well as ecosystem services, such as flood risk management. This also affects the watercourse further downstream. The headwaters form the foundation of a river system.
One of the distinguishing features of headwaters is the lower volume of water, which can make the watercourse more vulnerable to pollution as it is less diluted. It also means any changes in the flow of water have a greater impact, particularly on temperature and certain species that are sensitive to small changes. The flow of the water can be altered by land management practices such as water drainage or storage and also by climate change.
If we want our projects to impact the River Trent headwaters then they need to be located within the correct catchment. A catchment is the area in which all flowing water converges into one particular watercourse.
This map shows the proposed project boundary (red dashed line). It is based on the catchments for the brooks that flow into the River Trent. Water that falls outside of this boundary either does not flow into the River Trent at all or it flows into the river outside of what we would consider to be the headwaters. The total area is approximately 170km².