Bishops Pond

Coordinates: 51°51′55″N 4°15′36″W / 51.8654°N 4.2601°W / 51.8654; -4.2601
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

51°51′55″N 4°15′36″W / 51.8654°N 4.2601°W / 51.8654; -4.2601

Bishops Pond (

River Tywi got cut off from the main river. The water level is topped up in winter as the river floods the valley floor, and the level drops in summer. The pond exhibits a natural succession from lake through swamp to marsh, and will eventually become meadow; this happens because aquatic plants clog the water and there is a gradual build up of organic detritus.[1]

Features

Bishops Pond is particularly notable as the best example of an oxbow lake in West Wales. Another feature is the dominant

northern marsh yellowcress and trifid bur-marigold. There are also fronds of adders-tongue fern on the bank of the lake. Various deciduous trees grow round the lake, and a large island develops at the western end during the winter.[1]

The lake contains tench, European perch, common roach, northern pike, eels, common minnows and three-spined sticklebacks, and may have once been stocked for coarse fishing purposes. Birds breeding here include kingfisher, white-throated dipper, mallard, Eurasian coot, common moorhen and mute swan, and other birds, including the little grebe visit in winter.[1] The moth Donacaula forficella was recorded from Bishops Pond, a first record for inland Carmarthenshire.[2]

See also

  • List of Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Carmarthen & Dinefwr

References

  1. ^ a b c A. Burgess; B. Goldsmith; T. Hatton-Ellis; M. Hughes; E. Shilland (2009). "CCW Standing Waters SSSI Monitoring 2007-8". Countryside Council for Wales. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  2. ^ "Bishop's Pond". Carmarthenshire Moth and Butterfly Group. 26 June 2015. Retrieved 19 March 2020.