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Research reveals the benefits of a classic chalk river plant, the water crowfoot (Ranunculus)

A PhD research project conducted by Queen Mary’s Dr Jessica Marsh in conjunction with the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT) has revealed the importance of water crowfoot – an aquatic plant found commonly in lowland rivers – in the conservation of young Atlantic salmon.

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The plant Ranunculus is an aquatic member of the buttercup family and is often found in clean gravelly lowland watercourses such as chalk rivers. Water crowfoot is particularly vulnerable to low water flows, pollution and physical loss from leisure activities, weed cutting and swan grazing.

Dr Jessica Marsh’s research at the Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT) shows that a high coverage of water crowfoot is associated with more and better-growing young salmon. With salmon populations declining, Dr Marsh’s findings recommend a solution: restoring high coverage of water crowfoot at least in lowland salmon rivers to tackle the depletion of this magnificent fish.

Jessica explained: “The populations of wild Atlantic salmon are in decline throughout most of their range, and the rivers of southern England are no exception. Brown trout are also declining due to predation, habitat degradation, pollution and warming water temperatures.

“It’s therefore important to ensure that young fish have the best possible habitats in which to grow and thrive. Our research identified that instream aquatic vegetation has benefits for juvenile salmon and to a lesser extent, trout, and demonstrates that river restoration aims for lowland rivers might be achieved through the promotion and even enhancement of naturally occurring Ranunculus beds to improve the production of both young salmon and trout.”

Jessica’s experiment took place in the River Frome in Dorset where water crowfoot plants were physically redistributed to make areas of low, medium and high plant cover. Over two years of monitoring, these sites were investigated for the effects of water crowfoot cover on the abundance, growth rates, feeding opportunities and competition between salmon and trout.

Across three published scientific papers, Jessica has revealed how young salmon and trout benefit directly from the physical shelter that water crowfoot provides, as well as indirectly through enhancement of prey provision and in depth and flow.

Previous GWCT research has suggested that larger salmon smolts or young salmon or trout moving from freshwater to the sea - are more likely to survive their Atlantic migration and return to breed. The river habitat and resources in the fishes’ first summer are important to achieve good body condition and size, with Jessica’s research finding that water crowfoot abundance influences these outcomes.

Dr Rasmus Lauridsen, Head of Fisheries Research at GWCT and supervisor of the study said: “Wild salmon populations have declined dramatically, in some areas by as much as 70 – 80% in the last 30 years. The GWCT has been monitoring salmon numbers in the River Frome, at our Salmon & Trout Research Centre since 1973, creating one of the most comprehensive records of salmon movement and survival in England and Wales.

"As a wildlife conservation organisation with an internationally recognised research centre for salmon and trout, we strive to support research that is both scientifically robust and has practical applications. Dr Marsh’s study illustrates how habitat quality impacts production of juvenile salmon and trout and the findings have clear management applications for river restoration techniques in lowland rivers.”

Professor John Iwan Jones, Head of the River Communities Group at Queen Mary University of London and supervisor of the study, said: “This research has shown that by promoting the naturally occurring Ranunculus beds that are so characteristic of our lowland rivers we can improve conditions for other threatened species, such as salmon and trout. Lowland chalk streams suffer from many pressures: this work has implications for how best to restore these important rivers and the species that live in them”.

Find out more on how Water Crowfoot benefits salmon in this GWCT storymap here.

Notes to Editors

For more information please contact Kate Williams at kwilliams@gwct.org.uk. Tel: 01425 652381.

For enquiries relating to Queen Mary University of London please contact Melissa Bradshaw on m.bradshaw@qmul.ac.uk and copy in at press@qmul.ac.uk in case of her absence. For any queries after 5pm, please phone the out of hours number: +44 (0)7970 096 188 

Research was funded by G & K Boyes Charitable Trust. The G & K Boyes Charitable Trust supports charitable organisations with a focus on education, training, advancement of health or saving lives, arts, culture, heritage, science, environment and conservation.

Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT) gwct.org.uk -Providing research-led conservation for a thriving countryside. The GWCT is an independent wildlife conservation charity that has carried out scientific research into Britain’s game and wildlife since the 1930s. We advise farmers and landowners on improving wildlife habitats. We employ 22 post-doctoral scientists and 50 other research staff with expertise in areas such as birds, insects, mammals, farming, fish and statistics. We undertake our own research as well as projects funded by contract and grant-aid from Government and private bodies.

Queen Mary University of London - At Queen Mary University of London, we believe that the diversity of ideas helps us achieve the previously unthinkable. Throughout our history, we’ve fostered social justice and improved lives through academic excellence. And we continue to live and breathe this spirit today, not because it’s simply ‘the right thing to do’ but for what it helps us achieve and the intellectual brilliance it delivers. Our reformer heritage informs our conviction that great ideas can and should come from anywhere. It’s an approach that has brought results across the globe, from the communities of east London to the favelas of Rio de Janeiro. We continue to embrace diversity of thought and opinion in everything we do, in the belief that when views collide, disciplines interact, and perspectives intersect, truly original thought takes form.

Read the original abstracts for the research mentioned at the links below. For copies of the papers in full, please contact Rasmus Lauridsen, rlauridsen@gwct.org.uk.

  1. Marsh, J.E., Lauridsen, R.B., Gregory, S.D., Beaumont, W.R.C., Scott, L.J., Kratina, P. & Jones, J.I. (2020). Above parr: Lowland river habitat characteristics associated with higher juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and brown trout (S. trutta) densities. Ecology of Freshwater Fish, 29:542–556.
  2. Marsh, J.E., Lauridsen, R.B., Gregory, S.D., Kratina, P., Scott, L.J., Cooling, D. & Jones, J.I. (2022). High summer macrophyte cover increases abundance, growth, and feeding of juvenile Atlantic salmon. Ecological Applications, 32:e2492.
  3. Marsh, J.E., Jones, J.I., Lauridsen, R.B., Grace, J.B. & Kratina, P. (2022). Direct and indirect influences of macrophyte cover on abundance and growth of juvenile Atlantic salmon. Freshwater Biology, 67:1861–1872.

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