The biological and chemical regimes of the Severn Estuary are severely stressed by its physical regime. Estuarine flora and fauna naturally adapt to habitat conditions. The Severn is dynamic and turbid to such a degree, however, as to put it beyond the tolerance of most species. The foreshores have an exceptionally low carrying capacity for shorebirds and provide poor feeding and nursery areas for fish. Parts of the subtidal bed regime are barren and few support any live organisms. The turbid water excludes sunlight and suppresses dissolved oxygen. The ecosystem is limited to the most hardy and immature estuarine organisms and these are only present as a result of continual recruitment from the Bristol Channel. Furthermore, combined sea level rise, increased storminess and foreshore erosion are sustaining the downward spiral in ecosystem biodiversity. This severe suppression is natural; it is not induced by anthropogenic contaminants. Should a tidal power barrage be built, mean water level and shelter would increase and current strengths diminish. Large-scale reductions in suspended load and greater bed stability would encourage colonisation. Mixed substrates would develop, leading to biodiverse and abundant invertebrate and vertebrate communities. It is unusual for a major engineering project to result in the large-scale invasion of a suppressed ecosystem by organisms; this is an inevitable consequence of this project.
Article navigation
March 2005
Research Article|
March 01 2005
Severn Barrage, UK—environmental reappraisal Available to Purchase
R. Kirby, PhD, CGeol;
R. Kirby, PhD, CGeol
Managing Director
Ravensrodd Consultants
Taunton, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
T. L. Shaw, PhD, FICE, FIWEM
T. L. Shaw, PhD, FICE, FIWEM
Managing Director
Shawater
Bath, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
April 13 2004
Accepted:
September 30 2004
Online ISSN: 1751-7680
Print ISSN: 1478-4629
© 2005 Thomas Telford Ltd
2005
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability (2005) 158 (1): 31–39.
Article history
Received:
April 13 2004
Accepted:
September 30 2004
Citation
Kirby R, Shaw TL (2005), "Severn Barrage, UK—environmental reappraisal". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering Sustainability, Vol. 158 No. 1 pp. 31–39, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/ensu.2005.158.1.31
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Lessons learned from reservoir discontinuances
Dams and Reservoirs (December,2022)
Ladybower Dam: upgrading in a national park
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Water Management (March,2004)
Briefing: Reservoirs in the landscape: design principles
Dams and Reservoirs (June,2026)
Elton Reservoir slip
Dams and Reservoirs (August,2022)
Early dams
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering History and Heritage (February,2009)
Related Chapters
Analysis of progressive failure and cracking in old British dams
Selected papers on geotechnical engineering by P R Vaughan
Slope stability and embankment dams
The Essence of Geotechnical Engineering: 60 years of Géotechnique
Hidroaysén Case: Building Dams in Chile’s Patagonia Region
Climate Change and the 2030 Corporate Agenda for Sustainable Development
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
