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24 September 2014
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Title - norfolk nature

Norfolk's good news for great crested newts
great crested newt.

The great crested newt (Triturus cristatus) is conserved wherever it lives in the UK.

Protected by the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981) and the European Habitats Directive (1994), the newt is also a priority for Biodiversity Action Plans and some areas of high population are protected as Sites of Special Scientific Interest or Special Areas of Conservation.

The great crested newt is the largest newt found in Britain, reaching up to 165 mm (5 陆 inches) long. The adults can be distinguished by their dark, usually black, colouring, which is marked with small, white spots. The underbelly is a fiery orange or paler yellow. The "crest" is a flap of skin sported by the males in the spring, and is virtually invisible when the newt is out of the water.

Survey records for Norfolk collected over many years and produced by the Norfolk Biological Records Centre show the newt occurs across the county, especially in the south and north east.

This is good news for newts, but we should not get complacent.

Great crested newts have a complex ecology, relying on dry land and ponds. A healthy population usually occurs where there is a cluster of ponds linked by a suitable land habitat, allowing the newts to travel between ponds.

This extended newt family is called a "metapopulation" and enables newt populations to be more stable over time, able to survive the temporary drying out of a pond or two in the cluster.

Suitable habitats to link ponds include rough (not mown) grass, woodland edge or hedgerows. The habitat also needs to contain damp, frost-free shelter, such as grassy tussocks or fallen wood, for hibernating.

great crested newts factfile>>>



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