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13
Feb 2023
Harrogate Borough Council has defended work to clear ground in a local nature reserve after local residents complained it was “brutal” and “excessive”.
The council cleared land and vegetation around the ponds in Rossett Nature Reserve in December – leaving the area looking rather ravaged.
The reserve is protected land because it is home to the great crested newt which breed in the ponds, along with frogs and toads. The work was carried out to support the newts' habitat.
Local walkers have taken to social media to question the extent of the work.
Eighty-eight-year-old Shirley Rhodes walks her dogs in the reserve and was concerned at the way the work had been carried out. She told the Stray Ferret:
The reserve, though, has had a persistent problem with an invasive non-native weed, Crassula Helmsii, that grows in the ponds. Last year the Stray Ferret reported on a trial in the reserve to eradicate the weed by introducing mites that attack it.
The council has conceded that the work does appear rather destructive but, in a long statement, it said the newts' habitat was being choked:
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