School children looking at artificial rockpools at Wightlink's Fishbourne port on Isle of Wight

Wightlink’s Vertipools are finalists for a top environmental award

An array of five artificial rockpools, or ‘Vertipools’ installed on a harbour wall at Wightlink’s ferry terminal at Fishbourne on the Isle of Wight by Island ecological consultancy Artecology, has been shortlisted for a national environmental award. The winners of the CIRIA BIG Biodiversity Challenge will be announced in London on 12 September 2018.

Artecology founders Ian Boyd and Nigel George came up with the idea of creating artificial habitat for marine wildlife, the Vertipools, as a way of helping our intertidal environment adapt to sea level rise and coastal squeeze on urban coastlines.

Entirely covered by water at high tide and revealed one by one as the tide falls, the rockpools and the walls alongside have been colonised by over 30 different species from crabs and barnacles to sea squirts and sponges. Marine biologist Dr Alice Hall from Bournemouth University is monitoring them and assessing them for biodiversity.

Wightlink started work with Artecology, Arc and consulting marine ecologists ABPMer as plans for port improvements were drawn up as part of the ferry company’s £45million investment in its Portsmouth-Fishbourne route. The Vertipools were installed in June 2017.

“Protecting the Solent’s marine environment is very important for us at Wightlink,” says Wightlink Chief Executive Keith Greenfield. “Our Vertipools are already home to a wide range of marine creatures and I am delighted this exciting ecological concept has been recognised by the judges of this national competition.”

Ian Boyd of Artecology adds: “By the end of 2018 there will be 100 Vertipools installed across marine sites in England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland and it is really marvellous that Wightlink, and the Isle of Wight, have been at the forefront of this new movement of positive change for wildlife.”

Armed with rockpooling nets, six children from Gurnard Primary School and two teachers saw the Vertipools and their marine life for themselves during a visit to Fishbourne in July. With the help of Artecology, the pupils carried out a proper survey of the pools and identified the species found. The special trip was hosted by Wightlink’s Environmental Officer Nicola Craig with support from the neighbouring Royal Victoria Yacht Club. The Club’s Howard Knowles captained the launch that took the group out to the harbour wall.

Teacher Charlotte Rand, science lead at Gurnard Primary, says: “The pupils had a great time and were very excited to take to the water and discover more about the creatures that can be found in our marine environment and the Island-born innovations that are helping to support them.”

The Vertipools will also feature on European television following a filmshoot in August.
A camera crew from Berlin Producers is working on the second season of a five part series The Isles of the Queen for the French-German channel arte. More than ten million people watched the first series.

For more information contact Karen Woods on 07775 694266 or [email protected]

Notes to Editors

Parents and guardians of the Gurnard Primary school pupils are happy for their images to be used in mainstream and social media.

www.ciria.org

http://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/18479d_2b14f37d6c7846a499900c7a92b56c68.pdf