At La Brenne we worked closely with the National Park staff and LPO (Ligue pour la Protection des Oiseaux) representatives, the French equivalent of RSPB. The economy is still very much connected to this diverse
Nature Reserve, and La Brenne maintains its cultural heritage by continuing fish farming, shooting of Red and Roe deer, Wild boar, and wildfowl. It was within this vast area of wetland habitat we carried out habitat management to provide suitable habitat for the breeding of whiskered terns. We worked together (with reserve staff and a local group) removing Water Lily rhizomes from the sticky clay area around a lake, where
they were encroaching too much on dragonfly habitat (this by no means an easy feat!). The Water Lilies would be re-planted later that year by LPO staff alongside other lakes in the area to create additional habitat for the terns. The conflicts and the management of the reserve were apparent all around; coypu traps, exterminated musk rats, and wild boar culling. Additionally invasive catfish are eradicated annually from the fish ponds, as they compete with the stocks of carp being farmed for the European Market. www.parc-naturel-brenne.fr/english


