Ponds

Whether found in a garden or part of an agricultural landscape, ponds are oases of wildlife worth investigating. Even small ponds can support a wealth of species and collectively, ponds play a key role in supporting freshwater wildlife.

What is it?

A familiar feature of many field corners, village greens and gardens, ponds are generally small in size, ranging from one to twenty thousand square metres (or two hectares – about two thirds of the area of Buckingham Palace). Ponds are not connected to each other or to other water bodies – they are only fed by rainwater or groundwater.

One of the best ways of bringing more wildlife into an area, ponds can be very diverse, supporting similar aquatic plants to lakes, and even more large invertebrates than rivers. The best ponds for wildlife have shallow margins with a fringe of vegetation and nearby plant cover for amphibians and insects with terrestrial life stages.

Why is it like this?

Many ponds are artificial and were originally dug for marl (a lime-rich clay spread on fields to reduce acidity) or to provide a water source for livestock. Village ponds were often created for washing off working horses. Some ponds have formed in bomb craters from WWII while others are ornamental, or have been created specifically for wildlife.

Unmaintained, field ponds may only last around 100 years, as they gradually fill with silt - fine, sludgy mud that gets swept in by rain and settles at the bottom. Small ponds can be completely transformed in this way by a single spell of heavy rain. However, some natural ponds may be ancient: pools known as pingos were created when ice-hills, formed by trapped water freezing and expanding, eventually melted, leaving water-filled depressions; they may be up to 14,000 years old. Seasonally flooded depressions tend not to silt up (as the silt oxidises when dry).

Distribution in the UK

There are thought to be around 500,000 ponds in Great Britain, plus around three million garden ponds. The largest number of pingos are found in Breckland in East Anglia.

What to look for

In early spring, look for glutinous masses of frog spawn, or strings of toad spawn, often in deeper water. Both common frog and smooth newt colonise garden ponds. Newts are best seen just after dusk in the early summer by scanning the pond margins with a torch – check also for Daubenton’s bat, sometimes seen skimming low over the surface at dusk.

Summer is the best time for pond-dipping – expect water beetles, diving beetles, water fleas, dragonfly nymphs, caddisfly larvae and aquatic snails. Look out for the translucent, primitive-looking fairy shrimp in seasonal pools a few weeks after they have re-filled, usually in autumn or winter. In acidic heathland ponds, look for the large raft spiders that sit on the water surface and can catch other invertebrates or even small fish.

Conservation

Many ponds have been drained or neglected and have filled with silt and vegetation or stagnated under fallen leaves. Some ponds become choked by alien invasive plants such as New Zealand pygmy weed, which is often unknowingly introduced by people emptying ponds or aquaria. Because they are small, ponds are particularly vulnerable to contamination by pollutants that run-off in rainwater from agricultural land and roads.

Recreational activities can also adversely affect ponds, such as allowing dogs to swim (which churns up the sediment), and feeding waterfowl (which can result in damagingly high populations and nutrient problems). Half a million ponds have been lost over the last 100 years and one in five remaining ponds are thought to be in poor condition. Initiatives are underway to try and restore lost ponds and create new ones that are not contaminated by alien plants or run-off.

Species with Pond

Great crested newt swimming with clear vision of its orange and black spotted underbelly

Great crested newt

With its prominent, wavy crest, the great crested newt, also known as the 'warty newt', looks like a mini dinosaur! This protected species favours clean ponds during the breeding season.

Common frog
© Guy Edwardes

Common frog

Our most well-known amphibian, the common frog is a regular visitor to garden ponds across the country, where they feast on slugs and snails. In winter, they hibernate in pond mud or under log piles.

Reserves with Ponds

Conningbrook Lake at sunset

Conningbrook Lakes Country Park

Conningbrook Lakes is made up of a series of lakes, ponds, river, wet woodland and grasslands – creating a great place for a riverside stroll, and host to a variety of wildlife.

Bluebells at Ashford Warren amongst trees
Ian Rickards

Ashford Warren & Hoads Wood

'Relic' wood pasture, veteran trees and nationally rare acid grassland make up this site squeezed between major roads, railway lines, and the rapid urban development of Ashford.

Kingfisher Galloway
Thinesh Thirugnanasampanthar

Oare Meadow

A meadow and low-lying bog.

Kiln Wood

Ancient woodland with a wide range of ground flora.

Turners Field

The reserve is managed as part of an organic livestock farm in partnership with a local farmer and consists of neutral grassland, a small stream, a pond and areas of scrub and mature woodland.

Sandwich and Pegwell Bay

Listen to the rolling waves on the sand and shingle, breathe in the saline scents of the saltmarsh, and watch the wonderful wildlife this very important and sensitive National Nature Reserve has to offer.

Hothfield heather in flower
Ian Rickards

Hothfield Heathlands

Rich in flora and fauna, this important reserve contains Kent's last four valley bogs and one of its few remaining fragments of open heath.

Holborough Marshes

Lying along the edge of the river Medway, this patchwork of wet fields and scrub is criss-crossed by ditches and home to many rare and unusual plants and animals.

Cromers wood view of the pond and trees surrounding it

Cromers Wood

An ancient semi-natural woodland on the southeast side of a dry slope valley. Carpets of wood anemone are followed by bluebells, early purple and common spotted orchids.

Tyland Barn pond

Tyland Barn Nature Park & Gardens

Tyland Barn is the headquarters of the Kent Wildlife Trust and a base for many of our educational activities. The restored 17th-century barn offers a flexible indoor space and is available for hire.

Create a garden pond

Follow our guide to make the perfect wildlife pond.

Learn about pond-building!