The Bristol Channel experiences one of the highest tidal ranges in the world and with the influence of swells from the Atlantic Ocean this makes it very much a marine environment. However, the Somerset coast also forms the southern shore of the massive Severn Estuary, with up to 10 million tons of silt moving up and down it at any one time. This silt, mixed with marine plankton and tiny fragments of organic matter, is key to the Channel’s importance for marine life. The nutrient-rich soup is food for billions of minute marine creatures, which are, in turn, eaten by larger invertebrates, fish and wading birds.
With between 70,000 and 80,000 wildfowl and waders visiting the Bristol Channel during spring and autumn migrations and a large proportion of them over-wintering here, its international importance to bird life cannot be underestimated. This is recognised through several conservation designations.