Orford Ness seal colony thriving with ‘lack of human disturbance’
Orford Ness seal colony thriving with ‘lack of human disturbance’
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Bu içerik, İngiltere sahilindeki Orford Ness’teki büyük bir fok kolonisinden ve buradaki gri fok yavrularının sayısının artışından bahsetmektedir. Ulusal Güven tarafından yönetilen site, her kış üreme mevsiminde daha fazla foku ağırlamaktadır. Koloni yöneticisi Matt Wilson, siteye gelen fok sayısının diğer İngiltere fok kolonileriyle yarışabileceğini umut etmektedir. Foklar, insan müdahalesinin azlığı sayesinde burada başarılı olmuş ve sayıları 2021’den bu yana sürekli artmıştır. Orford Ness, doğal bir koruma bariyeri sağlayan yarıklar ve tepe yamaçlarına sahip olduğundan fokların kötü kış hava koşullarından korunmasına yardımcı olmaktadır. Bu koloninin başarısı, hem türün hem de deniz ortamının sağlığı için olumlu bir gösterge olarak kabul edilmektedir. Matt Wilson, Orford Ness’in gri fok kolonisi için birçok avantaja sahip olduğunu ve İngiltere kıyılarında foklar için bir merkez haline gelmeyi umduklarını belirtmektedir.
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A large colony of seals is thriving on an English coastline thanks to a “lack of human disturbance”, according to the site’s manager
Orford Ness in Suffolk is the home to the county’s first breeding colony of grey seals.
The site, managed by the National Trust, welcomes more and more seals during each winter breeding season.
Matt Wilson, the trust’s countryside manager for the Suffolk and Essex coast, said he hoped the site would rival other UK seal colonies.
This winter’s breeding season, which began in November, has seen 80 pups already born with many more expected.
Since 2021, when the seals first arrived, their numbers have been steadily increasing.
The site is now home to about 400 seals, up from about 200 three years ago.
“We’re really lucky,” said Mr Wilson.
“It’s part of their natural movement of colonies anyway, so they’ve moved down, we think, from Lincolnshire and Norfolk colonies.
“They’ve formed a breakaway group, found this site and moved into the space we’ve got here.
“It’s a real privilege to have them on this site and a responsibility, too, for the team here.”
Orford Ness is a 10-mile long (16km) vegetated shingle spit, joined to the mainland just south of Aldeburgh.
During the 20th Century it was a military testing site.
The public are able to visit during the summer but not allowed to get close to the colony.
Mr Wilson said he believed this was a “major factor” in the colony’s success.
“Even during our open season for visitors, the public aren’t allowed on to this section because the seals are still here through the summer,” he said.
“It’s a great factor for them, this lack of human disturbance, for what is a really amazing occurrence on this site.”
Mr Wilson said the spit’s ridges and dips also added a “natural shelter barrier” against bad winter weather.
He said the success of the colony was a good indicator of the health of both the species and the marine environment, because the seals would not be there unless there was a good food source for them in the North Sea.
“We’re certainly hoping it will become one of the hotspots for grey seals around the UK coast,” he said.
“It is such an enormous potential; it is a great environment for them.”
Orford Ness seal colony thriving with ‘lack of human disturbance’
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