Dr Barry Yates is Sussex Wildlife Trust’s Manager at Rye Harbour Nature Reserve and the reserve has just celebrated its 50th anniversary. Barry has now worked (and lived) on the reserve for 36 years. He talks about the origins of Rye Harbour Nature Reserve, and what’s been happening during the last 50 years:
“In the 1960s there was a realisation that coastal habitats in Sussex were under increasing pressure from tourism and development, so the Sussex Naturalists Trust (now the Sussex Wildlife Trust) and the Sussex Ornithological Society (SOS) worked together to build a case for several coastal nature reserves.
The work began under the enthusiastic guidance of Frank Penfold, Chairman of the Trust and Guy Mountford, President of SOS. Jack Harrison, a retired solicitor, on behalf of the Trust, and Tony Marr, the SOS Secretary, worked closely together preparing the submission which went to the County Councils.
In July 1965 East Sussex County Council (ESCC) published a report, “Coastal Preservation and Development”, which supported proposals put forward by the Sussex Naturalists Trust for the establishment of a nature reserve at Rye Harbour.
Since 1970, Rye Harbour Nature Reserve has been guided by a Management Committee with representatives from voluntary and statutory bodies. The staff and volunteers recorded the wildlife and managed the special habitats of saltmarsh, saline lagoon, vegetated shingle, wet grassland and reedbed.
The committee passed on its direct management function to ESCC in 1995 and then in 2011 this was transferred to Sussex Wildlife Trust and The Friends of Rye Harbour Nature Reserve has also generously supported the nature reserve with volunteers and funding since 1973.
Major advances have included the progress from just having a summer Warden to a team of five. After the current health crisis we will double staffing here, with funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund as part of the Discover Rye Harbour Project.
The land area has increased from the original Beach Reserve with the addition of privately owned land, the purchase of Castle Water by Sussex Wildlife Trust, and the incorporation of Rye Harbour Farm into the reserve after the Environment Agency bought it in 2002 to build improved sea defences. The number of birdwatching hides has increased from one small, to five large ones that are all accessible to some wheelchairs.
We have protected and managed the coastal habitats here that were once more common in Sussex, with four landscape scale habitat projects that stand out:
- Development of electric fencing to protect the roosting and ground nesting birds.
- Creation of 20 ha. of reedbed habitat adjacent to the Castle Water gravel pit.
- Re-creation of 20 ha. of saltmarsh as part of the sea defence improvements.
- Improvement of new saline lagoons, ponds, scrapes and wet grassland created by the sea defence improvements.
None of this happens without funding and regular contributors have been: Environment Agency, Natural England, ESCC, Rother District Council, Icklesham Parish Council and of course, the Friends of Rye Harbour Nature Reserve.
During the last 50 years there have been so many wildlife highlights, but the top ones include:
- Increasing the number of breeding birds to nearly 100 that includes 6 waders, 6 gulls, 6 ducks, 7 warblers and 3 terns.
- The saltmarsh re-creation project has rapidly matured in a few years to become a productive area for some special wildlife that includes breeding Avocet and Redshank, large flocks of wintering Golden Plover, the flowers Sea Heath and Sea Barley and several scarce invertebrates: Sea Aster Bee, moths – Crescent Striped and Star-wort, spiders – Enoplognatha mordax and Argenna patula, beetles – Dyschirius angustatus and Cassida nobilis.
- The re-establishment of a large population of Stinking Hawksbeard that was declared extinct in UK in 1980s – with more than 30,000 plants last year and it featured on a Royal Mail £1.55 stamp!
- The creation of a large reedbed that has contributed to an amazing recovery of the UK Bittern population (11 booming males in 1997 to more than 200 last year). The reedbeds at Castle Water now have 1-2 booming Bittern plus breeding Marsh Harrier, Bearded Tit, Water Rail, Cettis Warbler, Garganey and Shoveler.
- The recent return of the Sussex Emerald moth to Sussex, several species new to Britain including Euaesthetus superlatus (beetle), Eumerus sogdianus (hoverfly), Neon pictus (jumping spider), Streaked Plusia moth, the first Least Tern recorded in Europe and the discovery of a new species of fly that lives underground in the shingle, Megaselia yatesi (named after me!).
It has been a great privilege to manage the land and its wildlife with so many amazing people and together develop this special place into what it is today – a coastal wetland that is home to hundreds of rare plants and animals that enjoyed by many people.
If we can inspire more people to appreciate and value wildlife, then we have a greater chance of reversing the decline of wildlife that has been going on all around us for decades.
In terms of what I hope for the future, I hope that the reserve is still here, and grown larger, with all our special species still living here, but joined by a few new ones like Beaver and nesting Black-winged Stilts and Great White Egrets.
I would want the reserve to still be funded within a society that values its environment and the international community has managed to slow the warming climate and helped the sea to be much healthier than it is today.
I would hope that Sussex Wildlife Trust is still inspiring people to be more wildlife aware. I hope they continue to support both the Sussex Wildlife Trust and the Friends of Rye Harbour Nature Reserve, and that my grandchildren bring their grandchildren here to enjoy the coastal landscape… and remember their grandparents.
We are living in difficult times at the moment, but nature continues to be remarkable, and I’d like to thank everyone who has supported the reserve over the decades, and continues to do so.”
Image Credits: Sussex Wildlife Trust , Rye News library .
Barry and his team do an amazing job, protecting and promoting wildlife and encouraging children of all ages with the various activities they have to offer! – It’s a special place particularly riding through first thing in the morning on my bike so peaceful with the sea on my right, the reserve on my left and camber ahead – magical!