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Reading footbridge closes for eight days for safety work
Reading footbridge closes for eight days for safety work

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • Climate
  • BBC News

Reading footbridge closes for eight days for safety work

A river footbridge is closing for eight days for safety Drive Footbridge has worn-out areas of exposed steel deck, posing a danger to pedestrians and cyclists, Reading Borough Council bridge over the River Kennett is due to reopen on Tuesday 5 council said it had spent £4m on similar projects over two years, including the replacement of King's Meadow footbridge and repairs to Grade II listed High Bridge in the town centre. The work at Kenavon Drive has been funded through a portion of the Community Infrastructure Levy, which is paid by developers, the authority Karen Rowland, in charge of environmental services, said: "We're fortunate to have the River Kennet running through Reading."We're making loads of improvements to ensure our residents can get around the town easily and sustainably by foot or by bike."Work also started recently to refurbish the Orbit Footbridge, which is scheduled to reopen in late October. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Eel project sees nearly 23,000 released into river
Eel project sees nearly 23,000 released into river

BBC News

time04-06-2025

  • Health
  • BBC News

Eel project sees nearly 23,000 released into river

Environment Agency Nearly 23,000 glass eels have been released into a chalk stream for a research project to see if their numbers can be increased. The eels, originally from the River Severn, have been put in at nine points on the River Kennet in Berkshire by Environment Agency (EA) fisheries specialists where their health and growth will be closely monitored. It is hoped restocking them in the river will result in more eels navigating their way back out to sea to breed. The EA said the project was being carried out to "safeguard this critically endangered species" after numbers of the once-common eel declined sharply in the 1980s. The EA said: "The numbers of new, young eels arriving at our shores are now a tiny percentage of those that arrived in the 1960s and 1970s." It added the reasons for the sharp drop in numbers were "unclear but may be due to over-fishing, habitat loss and fragmentation, parasites or climate change". Peter Gray, EA fisheries team leader, said: "We are working hard to address the many struggles that eels face and are taking action to safeguard this critically endangered species. "Over the coming months and years, we will closely monitor the released eels to see how they are surviving and growing. Eventually we want to discover whether this type of management produces more eels going out to sea to breed." European eels hatch 4,000 miles (6,500km) away in the Atlantic's Sargasso Sea before crossing the ocean and migrating up UK estuaries and rivers. The eels need to swim freely up and downstream along rivers to find places to hide and food to eat in order to successfully grow. Mature eels then make the journey back to the Sargasso Sea to breed. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram. Berkshire Newbury Environment Agency

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