2000: a new Millenium - and a new name
In 2000, Pond Action formed Ponds Conservation Trust and successfully secured funding from the National Lottery. In 2004, the two organisations merged to become Pond Conservation: The Water Habitats Trust. The new name reflected both our special interest in ponds and the fact that we were concerned about all kinds of freshwater habitats. Now a team of about 10 people, the charity was still based at Oxford Brookes University with outposted members in the north of England.
This era saw the beginning of our now distinctive view on freshwaters in the landscape. With a groundbreaking survey of all freshwaters around the National Trust’s Buscot and Coleshill estate near Swindon in southern England, we surveyed a cross section of all the freshwater habitats – ponds, lakes, rivers, streams and ditches – in a typical patch of the English countryside. This was the first time anyone had made observation like this. The results were surprising and revealing and led us to develop many new lines of though and practical ideas. Most important of these was recognising the importance of small freshwater habitats generally. One of the most significant outcomes of this work was to show just how diverse ponds were compared to other freshwaters. This information played a key part in helping to persuade policymakers that high ecological quality ponds should be recognised as priority habitats.
We began to engage further with policy makers and working with colleagues in the NGO sector. This led, in 2007, to the first assessment of the condition of ponds covering the whole of Great Britain, undertaken with the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology as part of the government’s Countryside Survey.