The Lakes at Stanborough Park
The Lakes at Stanborough Park were opened in 1970. They are man made and were
built as a result of gravel extraction at the time of the building of the A1(M)
Motorway, although the thought of a riverside park had been considered since
the Master Plan of 1949.
Below
you can find information on habitats and animals around the lakes. See the pages
on The River Lea for more information
about plants, animals and water quality on and around the river as it travels
through Stanborough Park
The Boating Lake
The Boating Lake (the north lake) at Stanborough is 4.6 hectares in size. It
is a shallow lake, under one metre in depth with several small islands. The
boating lake is fed by water from the River Lea at its north end and from a
spring. Excess water flows over a weir back into the river at the south end.
Coarse fish such as carp are bred in the boating lake and fishing is banned
here.
The
Sailing Lake
The Sailing Lake (the south lake) is 6.2 hectares in size. This lake has no
islands but is deeper than the boating lake, more than 2m deep in places. Unlike
the Boating Lake the Sailing Lake is ground water fed. Before the lakes were
built the River Lea used to flow through part of the Sailing Lake but it was
re-directed to the west side. Many water sport activities take place here, including
sailing, windsurfing and angling.
Water Quality of the Lakes
The only significant problem for the lake is Eutrophication or nutrient enrichment.
Eutrophication is when plant nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, increase
in the water. This causes excessive plant growth and algae in particular will
increase rapidly if there are excessive nutrients, creating a 'green pea soup'
look to the water in the lakes. Very few other plants can grow in the lakes
due to the algae blocking the light, thus the other plants die.
When
the algae begin to die off, the bacteria that decomposes them increase greatly
in the lake and they use up lots of oxygen. The oxygen levels in the water fall,
starving fish and underwater insects of vital oxygen and many will die. The
cause of the nutrients input can be caused by high nutrients flowing into the
lakes from the River Lea, from people feeding the wildfowl and excrement from
such a large number of birds that feeding the birds can result in.
More information on the River Lea
Wildlife of the lake
The lakes are visited by and provide a home for many animals. Even with their
artificial nature they, like many other gravel pits in the UK, have become important
wildlife sites. As well as fish and birds, Daubenton's bats come to the lakes
at Stanborough to feed on insects around the water's surface. You can see these
bats just after dusk in the summer months as they swoop low over the water to
pick off insects.
Fish
The Sailing Lake was originally stocked with bronze bream, roach, common carp,
mirror carp and perch. These species are still found, along with species such
as rudd, tench, crucian carp and chub. Pike and zander have been introduced
in the past illegally.
Birds
Stanborough Park is home to a variety of different waterfowl throughout the
year.
More information on birds at Stanborough
Park
Habitats and Plant life
At Stanborough there are many different habitats to visit away from the Lakes.
Areas you can explore include acid grassland, neutral grassland, woodland, old
hedgerow, reed marsh and wet woodland (willow carr).
More information on the habitats and plant
life at Stanborough Park