Code
A02
Sector
Agriculture
Other sector(s)
Urban
Forest
Hydro Morphology
The complete description of the NWRM
Summary

Buffer strips are areas of natural vegetation cover (grass, bushes or trees) at the margin of fields, arable land, transport infrastructures and water courses. They can have several different configurations of vegetation found on them varying from simply grass to combinations of grass, trees, and shrubs.  Due to their permanent vegetation, buffer strips offer good conditions for effective water infiltration and slowing surface flow; they therefore promote the natural retention of water. They can also significantly reduce the amount of suspended solids, nitrates and phosphates originating from agricultural run-off. Buffer strips can be sited in riparian zones, or away from water bodies as field margins, headlands or within fields (e.g. beetle banks). Hedges across long, steep slopes may reduce soil erosion as they intercept and slow surface run-off water before it builds into damaging flow, particularly where there is a margin or buffer strip alongside.

 

For the purpose of this catalogue, riparian buffer (see F1) are considered a separate NWRM as they generally have different design, implementation and management criteria.

Illustration(s)

Hedgerow (UK)

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/habitats/hedge(link is external)

Beetle bank (UK)

Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:On_Fox_Hill_-_geograph.org.uk_-_816223.jpg?(link is external)

Possible benefits with level

Case studies per NWRM

Restructuring the effluent web in ItalyFloodbreaking hedgerows in Southern FranceTullstorpsån rural development project in SwedenField margins in Heilbronn, GermanyBaixo Vouga Lagunar (BVL) bocage landscape, Portugal
Leaflet © OpenStreetMap contributors