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Habitat Type: Lakes - Peat lakes
Habitat Type: Lakes - Peat lakes
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Written by Oliver Lewis
Updated over 8 months ago

© Christine Johnstone (CC BY-SA 2.0). Photo of peat mires on eastern shores of Flask Lake

The following is a short summary of the habitat type and how to create/enhance it to a "good" condition. For an informed position, please refer to official up-to-date WFD Lakes typology or the UK Government's Condition Assessment Sheet.

Lakes in which the overwhelming majority of the lake catchment is composed of peat. Natural lakes and ponds with (usually) brown-tinted water due to peat and humic acids, generally on peaty soils in bogs or in heaths with natural evolution toward bogs.

Peaty lakes are effectively oligotrophic, low-alkalinity lakes within catchments dominated by blanket peat. A detailed description is provided in section 8.3.1 of this report by HM Government.

How to Create / Enhance to a "Good" condition

There are a set of criteria that are used to judge the condition of this habitat. These are listed below.

Condition Assessment Criteria

The Freshwater Biological Association ‘Habitat Naturalness Assessment’ is used to assess the condition of lakes. Scores for four attributes (physical, hydrological, chemical, and biological naturalness) are averaged to generate an overall 'habitat naturalness assessment score' which can then be translated into a condition score for use in the metric (see below).

There are other elements considered in the lake naturalness assessment, but these are not included when calculating the condition assessment score.

Details of the methodology for assessing naturalness of lakes are available at: Contribute naturalness data – Discovering Priority Habitats in England

The key documents are:

We encourage recording of data on lakes on the Freshwater Biological Association ‘Habitat Naturalness Assessment’ website portal: Contribute data – Discovering Priority Habitats in England (wpengine.com)

Average 'Habitat Naturalness Assessment' Class

Condition Assessment Score

1 Natural

Good (3)

2

Fairly good (2.5)

3

Moderate (2)

4

Fairly poor (1.5)

5 Least natural

Poor (1)

Useful Resources

If you are interested in enhancing or creating this habitat, you should consider the following (all recommended by CIEEM or HM Government):

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