Wildlife on the Exe Estuary is set to benefit from an exciting new partnership between the South East Devon Wildlife (SEDW) team and the Exeter City Council Harbour Master’s Office. The collaboration ...
The battle to protect Britain's overwintering birds on the Exe estuary is quiet but persistent - fought not with protest signs or public outcry, but with paddleboards, binoculars, and friendly ...
There are many things my mother and I found ourselves looking forward to during our stay at Lympstone Manor: the vineyard, the pool overlooking the Exe estuary, the eight-course, Michelin-star tasting ...
Boat users will be ‘banned’ from areas of the Exe Estuary as part of plans to create two wildlife refuges. Councillors from local authorities surrounding the Exe Estuary approved the proposals for ...
The Exe Estuary has been a traditional stopping point for migratory birds, but man's influence on the environment has put these breeding grounds under threat. Now the Royal Society for the Protection ...
Water-users are asked not to enter the wildlife refuge zones Two wildlife protection zones in the Exe Estuary are proving to be a success, five years after they were introduced, say bird experts. The ...
You are in: Devon > In Pictures > 360s Panoramas > Exe Estuary A view across the Exe Estuary towards Lympstone at low tide. The estuary is a haven for wading birds with over 20,000 birds wintering on ...
This paper compares the diversity, distribution and trophic composition of the nematode assemblages in the intertidal sediments of the macrotidal Exe Estuary (UK) and the shallow subtidal sediments of ...
(1) Oystercatchers Haematopus ostralegus eating mussels Mytilus edulis on the Exe Estuary were aggressive and often stole mussels from each other. A stable and linear dominance hierarchy existed ...