List of Sites of Special Scientific Interest in Suffolk
52°10′N 1°0′E / 52.167°N 1.000°E
Suffolk is a county in East Anglia. It is bounded by Norfolk to the north, Cambridgeshire to the west, Essex to the south and the North Sea to the east. With an area of 1,466 square miles (3,800 km2), it is the eighth largest county in England,[1] and in mid-2016 the population was 745,000.[2] At the top level of local government is Suffolk County Council, and below it are 5 borough and district councils: Babergh, Ipswich, Mid Suffolk, West Suffolk and East Suffolk.[3] Much of the coast consists of the estuaries of the Orwell, Stour, Alde, Deben and Blyth rivers, with large areas of wetlands and marshes. Agriculture and shipping play a major role in the county's economy.[1]
In England, Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) are designated by Natural England, a non-departmental public body which is responsible for protecting England's natural environment. Designation as an SSSI gives legal protection to the most important wildlife and geological sites.[4] As of October 2017 there are 142 SSSIs in Suffolk,[5] of which 109 are biological, 28 geological and 5 are designated under both criteria.
One site is in the Dedham Vale, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), and thirty-six are in another AONB, Suffolk Coast and Heaths. There are thirty-three Geological Conservation Review sites, twenty-three Nature Conservation Review sites, twenty Special Areas of Conservation, thirty Special Protection Areas under the European Union Directive on the Conservation of Wild Birds, eight Ramsar internationally important wetland sites, seven national nature reserves and four contain scheduled monuments. Six sites are local nature reserves, twenty-seven are managed by the Suffolk Wildlife Trust, five by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and one by the National Trust. The largest is Breckland Forest at 18,126-hectare (44,790-acre), which is partly in Norfolk and has several invertebrates on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species,[6] and the smallest is a 0.1-hectare (0.25-acre) meadow in London Road Industrial Estate, Brandon, which has the largest known wild population in Britain of the nationally rare sunflower Artemisia campestris.[7]
Key
[edit] Interest[edit]
Public access[edit]
| Other classifications[edit]
|
Sites
[edit]Site name | Photograph | B | G | Area | Public access | Location | Other classifications | Map[a] | Citation[b] | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abbey Wood, Flixton | 18.0 hectares (44 acres)[8] | NO | Flixton 52°25′19″N 1°24′11″E / 52.422°N 1.403°E TM 315 859[8] | Map | Citation Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine | This ancient woodland is managed as coppice with standards. Common trees include hazel, hornbeam and oak. The flora are diverse with dog's mercury dominant, and there is one rare species, thin-spiked wood sedge.[9] | ||||
Alde–Ore Estuary | 2,534.0 hectares (6,262 acres)[10] | PP | Woodbridge 52°06′N 1°30′E / 52.1°N 1.5°E TM 425 512[10] | GCR,[11][12] NCR[13] NNR[14][15] NT,[16] Ramsar,[17][18] RSPB,[19] SAC,[20][21] SCHAONB,[22] SPA,[23][24] SWT[25][26][27] | Map | Citation Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine | Natural England describes the scientific interests of the site as "outstanding and diverse". It has the second largest and best preserved area of vegetated shingle in Britain. The birdlife is nationally important, and there are several rare spiders. Gedgrave Cliff has fossiliferous strata dating to the early Pliocene Coralline Crag Formation.[28] | |||
Aldeburgh Brick Pit | 0.9 hectares (2.2 acres)[29] | NO | Aldeburgh 52°09′32″N 1°34′59″E / 52.159°N 1.583°E TM 452 572[29] | GCR,[30] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This pit has a sequence of deposits dating to the Pleistocene, and it is one of the few to have deposits dating to the Bramertonian Stage, around two million years ago. It has been fundamental to two studies of the early Pleistocene in the area.[31] | |||
Aldeburgh Hall Pit | 1.0 hectare (2.5 acres)[32] | NO | Aldeburgh 52°09′11″N 1°34′59″E / 52.153°N 1.583°E TM 452 566[32] | GCR,[33] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has very fossiliferous rocks of the early Pliocene Coralline Crag Formation around five million years ago. The bryozoan fauna are rich and diverse, and the stratification may indicate the interior of an offshore sandbank.[34] | |||
Arger Fen | 49.7 hectares (123 acres)[35] | YES | Sudbury 51°59′10″N 0°48′43″E / 51.986°N 0.812°E TL 932 357[35] | DVAONB,[36] LNR,[37][38] SWT[39] | Map | Citation | Most of this site is ancient woodland, and there are also areas of fen and wet grassland on lower slopes. Tiger Hill has dry, acidic grassland, with old anthills, mosses and lichens, and there are several badger setts.[40] | |||
Bangrove Wood, Ixworth | 18.6 hectares (46 acres)[41] | NO | Bury St Edmunds 52°18′47″N 0°49′48″E / 52.313°N 0.83°E TL 930 721[41] | Map | Citation Archived 2013-12-19 at the Wayback Machine | This is ancient coppice with standards on clay soil with diverse herb flora. The most common trees are ash, field maple and hazel, with many oak standards. Flora include early purple orchid, wood anemone and pale wood violet.[42] | ||||
Barking Woods | 98.7 hectares (244 acres)[43] | PP | Ipswich 52°08′N 1°02′E / 52.13°N 1.03°E TM 077 521[43] | SWT[44] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These ancient woodlands have been documented since 1251. The canopy is mainly oak, ash and silver birch, and other trees include the rare wild pear. The flora is diverse, including herb paris, ramsons, sanicle and early purple orchid.[45] | |||
Barnby Broad and Marshes | 192.7 hectares (476 acres)[46] | PP | Beccles 52°28′N 1°38′E / 52.46°N 1.64°E TM 477 910[46] | Ramsar,[47][48] SAC,[49][50] SPA,[51][52] SWT[53][54] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has grazing marshes, fen, carr woodland, open water and dykes. The diverse plant communities include many rare and uncommon species. Several rare birds breed there, and the site is also interesting entomologically. Otters hunt in the fen and waterways.[55] | |||
Barnham Heath | 78.6 hectares (194 acres)[56] | NO | Barnham 52°23′02″N 0°45′50″E / 52.384°N 0.764°E TL 882 798[56] | NCR,[57] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation | This site has areas of acidic heathland with damp grassland in river valleys. Gravel workings and scrub have produced habitats valuable to birds such as nightingales and whitethroats. Birds found on open heathland include stone-curlews, a protected species, and wheatears. Six species of lichen and eight of moss have been recorded.[60] | |||
Bawdsey Cliff | 17.4 hectares (43 acres)[61] | YES | Felixstowe 52°00′00″N 1°24′58″E / 52.0°N 1.416°E TM 346 386[61] | GCR,[62][63] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This 2-kilometre (1.2-mile) long section provides the largest exposure of the Early Pleistocene Red Crag Formation, and it is rich in fossils of marine molluscs. It is described by Natural England as having great potential for the study of non-glacial Pleistocene environments.[64] | |||
Berner's Heath | 235.9 hectares (583 acres)[65] | PL | Bury St Edmunds 52°22′N 0°38′E / 52.36°N 0.64°E TL 797 763[65] | NCR,[66] SAC,[67][68] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation | Most of the heath is dominated by heather, and there are also areas of woodland, scrub, calcareous grassland and lichen-rich grassland. The heather varies in age as it has been rotationally burnt, and the oldest heather has the most diverse flora and insects.[69] | |||
Bixley Heath | 5.1 hectares (13 acres) | YES | Ipswich 52°02′28″N 1°12′18″E / 52.041°N 1.205°E TM 199 429 | LNR[70] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has areas of dry heath on high ground and swamp in a valley bottom. The heath is dominated by common heather, and other plants include bell heather and sheep's fescue. There is a dense stand of lesser pond-sedge in the swamp.[71] | |||
Black Ditches, Cavenham | 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres)[72] | NO | Bury St Edmunds 52°17′06″N 0°35′56″E / 52.285°N 0.599°E TL 774 684[72] | SM[73][74] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is species-rich grassland, a scarce habitat in East Anglia, on a stretch of an early Anglo-Saxon boundary earthwork. There are a number of locally and nationally rare plants. Calcareous scrub and deciduous woodland provide additional ecological interest.[75] | |||
Blaxhall Heath | 45.9 hectares (113 acres)[76] | YES | Woodbridge 52°09′18″N 1°28′41″E / 52.155°N 1.478°E TM 380 565[76] | SCHAONB,[22] SM,[77] SPA,[78][79] SWT[80] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This dry lowland heath has large areas of heather which support diverse lichens and mosses, and other areas of grassland which are grazed by rabbits. Heathland birds include nightjars and tree pipits.[81] | |||
Blo' Norton and Thelnetham Fens | 21.2 hectares (52 acres)[82] | YES | Thelnetham 52°22′12″N 0°57′40″E / 52.37°N 0.961°E TM 017 788[82] | NCR,[83] SAC,[84][85] SWT[86] | Map[c] | Citation | The site is designated mainly because of its open carr fen communities, although further interest is provided by areas of carr woodland and meadows. Calcareous fen flora include black bog rush, saw sedge, purple moor grass and fen orchid.[87] | |||
Bobbitshole, Belstead | 1.7 hectares (4.2 acres)[88] | NO | Ipswich 52°01′44″N 1°07′52″E / 52.029°N 1.131°E TM 149 414[88] | GCR[89] | Map | Citation Archived 18 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine | This is the type locality for the warm Ipswichian interglacial around 130,000 to 115,000 year ago. It has yielded continuous deposits from the end of the preceding Wolstonian cold stage to the end of the Ipswichian. It is described by Natural England as a "nationally important Pleistocene reference site".[90] | |||
Bradfield Woods | 81.4 hectares (201 acres)[91] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°11′N 0°49′E / 52.18°N 0.82°E TL 930 576[91] | NNR,[15][92] SWT[93] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These woods have a history of coppicing dating to before 1252, producing a very high diversity of flora, with over 370 plant species recorded. Uncommon woodland flowers include oxlip, herb paris and ramson. There is also a rich variety of fungi, with two species not recorded elsewhere in Britain.[94] | |||
Breckland Farmland | 13,392.4 hectares (33,093 acres)[95] | NO | Brandon 52°24′N 0°36′E / 52.4°N 0.6°E TL 796 852[95] | SPA[58][59] | Map[c] | Citation Archived 8 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine | The site is designated an SSSI for its internationally important population of stone-curlews. These birds nest in March on bare ground in cultivated land with very short vegetation. Fields with sugar beet and vegetables and no recreational disturbance are preferred.[96] | |||
Breckland Forest | 18,126.0 hectares (44,790 acres)[97] | PP | Brandon 52°24′N 0°42′E / 52.4°N 0.7°E TL 822 872[97] | GCR,[98][99] LNR,[100] SPA[58][59] | Map[c] | Citation Archived 8 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine | The forest has breeding Woodlarks and nightjars in internationally important numbers, and several nationally rare vascular plants and invertebrates on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. There are also geological sites which provide evidence of the environmental and human history of East Anglia during the Middle Pleistocene.[6] | |||
Brent Eleigh Woods | 31.7 hectares (78 acres)[101] | NO | Sudbury 52°05′N 0°50′E / 52.09°N 0.83°E TL 938 473[101] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site consists of three separate areas, Spragg’s, Langley and Camps Woods. They are ancient woodland on calcareous clay soils. The main trees are oak and ash, and there are ponds and a stream.[102] | ||||
Buckanay Farm Pit, Alderton | 0.7 hectares (1.7 acres)[103] | YES | Woodbridge 52°01′48″N 1°25′59″E / 52.03°N 1.433°E TM 356 424[103] | GCR,[104] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This fossiliferous site exposes rocks of the marine Red Crag Formation, with a megaripple sequence showing the gradual reduction in depth of the sea.[105] The Red Crag spans the end of the Pliocene around 2.6 million years ago and the start of the succeeding Pleistocene.[106] | |||
Bugg's Hole Fen, Thelnetham | 3.7 hectares (9.1 acres)[107] | NO | Thelnetham 52°22′23″N 0°56′38″E / 52.373°N 0.944°E TM 005 791[107] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This calcareous fen in the valley of the River Little Ouse has a range of habitats. Fen grassland has flora such as grass of parnassus and bog pimpernel, there are southern marsh orchid and marsh pennywort in marsh grassland, and spring-fed tall fen has lesser water parsnip.[108] | ||||
Burgate Wood | 29.9 hectares (74 acres)[109] | NO | Burgate 52°20′24″N 1°02′42″E / 52.34°N 1.045°E TM 075 757[109] | SM[110] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is ancient coppice with standards oak and hornbeam woodland. The flora is diverse, including the rare lungwort and the uncommon herb paris, yellow archangel and hairy woodrush.[111] | |||
Cavendish Woods | 53.5 hectares (132 acres)[112] | PP | Sudbury 52°07′N 0°37′E / 52.11°N 0.61°E TL 791 495[112] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These ancient woods are managed as coppice with standards. The main standard tree is oak, and the flora is diverse, including the uncommon oxlip. There are many fallow deer, and breeding birds include woodcock, common snipe and treecreeper.[113] | ||||
Cavenham–Icklingham Heaths | 419.0 hectares (1,035 acres)[114] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°20′N 0°34′E / 52.33°N 0.57°E TL 751 732[114] | NCR,[115] NNR,[116][15] SAC,[67][68] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation | This site has habitats of heath and grassland, with smaller areas of woodland and fen, in the flood-plain of the River Lark. It is described by Natural England as of national importance for its invertebrate species, including some which are rare and endangered, and it also has nationally rare flora and nationally scarce bryophytes.[117] | |||
Cherry Hill and The Gallops, Barton Mills | 10.4 hectares (26 acres)[118] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°19′05″N 0°31′34″E / 52.318°N 0.526°E TL 723 719[118] | NCR[119] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site consists of road verges which have calcareous grassland with four nationally rare plants, and two locally uncommon ones, sand catchfly and yellow medick. There is also a strip of pine plantation which has several rare insects.[120] | |||
Chillesford Church Pit | 1.1 hectares (2.7 acres)[121] | NO | Woodbridge 52°07′01″N 1°28′41″E / 52.117°N 1.478°E TM 382 522[121] | GCR,[122] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has deposits dating to the Early Pleistocene Bramertonian Stage, around 2.4 to 1.8 million years ago. Fossils of molluscs and pollen indicate a temperate climate dating to the Chillesford Crag, which is part of the Norwich Crag Formation.[123] | |||
Chippenhall Green | 16.3 hectares (40 acres)[124] | YES | Eye 52°19′59″N 1°21′18″E / 52.333°N 1.355°E TM 287 758[124] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This unimproved grassland on calcareous clay soil has grasses including meadow foxtail, sweet vernal grass and red fescue. Diverse flowering plants include cuckoo flowers and a large population of green-winged orchids.[125] | ||||
Combs Wood | 15.1 hectares (37 acres)[126] | YES | Stowmarket 52°10′16″N 1°00′14″E / 52.171°N 1.004°E TM 055 568[126] | SWT[127] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is ancient coppice woodland on boulder clay, with variable quantities of sand and loess resulting in different soil types. In areas of pedunculate oak and hornbeam the ground flora is sparse, but it is rich and diverse in ash and maple woodland. Grassy rides and a pond provide additional habitats for invertebrates.[128] | |||
Cornard Mere | 8.5 hectares (21 acres)[129] | YES | Sudbury 52°00′58″N 0°45′00″E / 52.016°N 0.75°E TL 888 389[129] | SWT[130] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has diverse habitats, with fen which is seasonally flooded, ruderal herb vegetation, woodland, grassland and scrub. Flora include water mint, gypsywort, skullcap, ragged robin and southern marsh orchid.[131] | |||
Corton Cliffs | 5.5 hectares (14 acres)[132] | YES | Lowestoft 52°30′32″N 1°45′00″E / 52.509°N 1.75°E TM 546 967[132] | GCR[133] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is described by Natural England as a "nationally important" site, as it is the type locality for the Anglian glaciation around 450,000 years ago. The Anglian was the most extreme ice age of the Pleistocene epoch. The site displays the complete Anglian sequence and its relation to the preceding Cromerian stage.[134] | |||
Crag Farm Pit, Sudbourne | 4.8 hectares (12 acres)[135] | NO | Woodbridge 52°06′58″N 1°32′42″E / 52.116°N 1.545°E TM 428 523[135] | GCR,[136] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site dates to the early Pliocene, around four million years ago. It is described by Natural England as an important geological site, which has the best exposure of sandwave facies of the Coralline Crag Formation. Fossils of many bryozoan species are present.[137] | |||
Crag Pit, Aldeburgh | 0.2 hectares (0.49 acres)[138] | NO | Aldeburgh 52°09′54″N 1°35′35″E / 52.165°N 1.593°E TM 458 580[138] | GCR,[139] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is the most northern site which exposes the Pliocene Coralline Crag Formation, which dates to around five million years ago. It has rich and diverse fossils, including many bryozoans, and other fauna include serpulids and several boring forms.[140] | |||
Crag Pit, Sutton | 0.7 hectares (1.7 acres)[141] | NO | Woodbridge 52°03′36″N 1°22′44″E / 52.06°N 1.379°E TM 317 456[141] | SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This small disused quarry is short rabbit-grazed grassland which supports one of only two British colonies of the endangered Small Alison flowering plants. Herbs include the uncommon mossy stonecrop.[142] | |||
Cransford Meadow | 4.6 hectares (11 acres)[143] | NO | Woodbridge 52°13′30″N 1°23′53″E / 52.225°N 1.398°E TM 322 640[143] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This unimproved meadow has a rich variety of flora. There are grasses such as creeping bent, meadow foxtail, sweet vernal-grass, crested dog's tail, perennial rye-grass and rough-stalked meadow-grass. It is one of only two sites in the county for ladies mantle Alchemilla filicaulis vestita. | ||||
Creeting St Mary Pits | 5.4 hectares (13 acres)[144] | PP | Ipswich 52°09′25″N 1°03′47″E / 52.157°N 1.063°E TM 096 554[144] | GCR[145] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These former quarries are the type site for the 'Creeting Sands', which are believed to be intertidal and shallow marine deposits from an early Pleistocene interglacial. It is described by Natural England as a key stratigraphic site.[146] | |||
Deadman's Grave, Icklingham | 127.3 hectares (315 acres)[147] | PP | Bury St Edmunds 52°20′N 0°37′E / 52.34°N 0.61°E TL 779 742[147] | NCR,[148] SAC,[67][68] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | According to Natural England, this site "is largely covered by short, sheep-grazed, species-rich calcareous grassland of the very highest value." It has four nationally rare plants, Spanish catchfly, Boehmer's cat's-tail, Breckland Wild Thyme and spring speedwell. Nationally rare stone-curlews breed there.[149] | |||
Deben Estuary SSSI | 981.1 hectares (2,424 acres)[150] | PP | Woodbridge 52°02′N 1°21′E / 52.04°N 1.35°E TM 296 434[150] | Ramsar,[151][152] SCHAONB,[22] SPA[153][154] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | The site has been designated an SSSI for its overwintering waders and wildfowl, and for its diverse saltmarshes. It has internationally important numbers of overwintering redshanks and nationally important of dark-bellied brent geese, shelducks and black-tailed godwits. The estuary also has three nationally rare plants and a nationally rare mollusc.[155] | |||
Dew's Ponds | 6.7 hectares (17 acres)[156] | NO | Halesworth 52°17′35″N 1°30′07″E / 52.293°N 1.502°E TM 389 719[156] | SAC[157][158] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has a variety of types of grassland, hedges and ditches, on chalk overlain by boulder clay. However, it has been designated an SSSI primarily because it has twelve ponds with one of the largest breeding populations of great crested newts in Britain. There are also grass snakes, smooth newts and slowworms.[157][159] | |||
Edwardstone Woods | 27.0 hectares (67 acres)[160] | NO | Sudbury 52°02′46″N 0°49′08″E / 52.046°N 0.819°E TL 934 424[160] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These are ancient coppice with standards woods, which are mainly ash, maple and hazel, but there are large stands of hornbeam and small-leaved lime in some areas. The diverse ground flora is typical of Suffolk boulder clay soils.[161] | ||||
Elmsett Park Wood | 8.6 hectares (21 acres)[162] | NO | Ipswich 52°04′37″N 1°00′43″E / 52.077°N 1.012°E TM 065 464[162] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This coppice with standards site has diverse woodland types and ground flora. Plants indicative of ancient woodland include nettle-leaved bellflower, wood spurge, butterfly orchid and the uncommon spurge laurel.[163] | ||||
Eriswell Low Warren | 7.4 hectares (18 acres)[164] | NO | Brandon 52°23′02″N 0°33′14″E / 52.384°N 0.554°E TL 739 793[164] | NCR,[165] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | The site is mainly unimproved acidic grassland on sandy soils, which has a variety of typical Breckland flora, and there are also areas of lichens and bryophytes. Rare plants include purple-stem cat's-tail, spring speedwell, Spanish catchfly and perennial knawel.[166] | |||
Fakenham Wood and Sapiston Great Grove | 200.7 hectares (496 acres)[167] | NO | Bury St Edmunds 52°22′N 0°50′E / 52.36°N 0.83°E TL 928 773[167] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These two coppice with standards woods comprise one of the largest areas of ancient woodland in the county. The ground flora is dominated by bracken and bramble, but there are also rides which provide habitats for butterflies, including the largest colony of white admirals in Suffolk.[168] | ||||
Ferry Cliff, Sutton | 2.8 hectares (6.9 acres)[169] | FP | Woodbridge 52°05′20″N 1°19′26″E / 52.089°N 1.324°E TM 278 486[169] | GCR,[170] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site exposes rocks dating to the paleocene, around 60 million years ago. It has the oldest British fossils of rodents, and ungulates, both even and odd toed. It also has early hyracotheriums.[171] | |||
Flixton Quarry | 0.2 hectares (0.49 acres)[172] | YES | Bungay 52°25′23″N 1°22′01″E / 52.423°N 1.367°E TM 290 859[172] | GCR[173] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has sands and gravels which are thought to be a glacial outwash dating to the most extreme ice age of the Pleistocene epoch, the Anglian glaciation around 450,000 years ago. It is described by Natural England as important because of its relationship with deposits of the succeeding Hoxnian Stage.[174] | |||
Fox Fritillary Meadow | 2.4 hectares (5.9 acres)[175] | NO | Stowmarket 52°12′00″N 1°12′07″E / 52.2°N 1.202°E TM 189 606[175] | SWT[176] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This unimproved meadow is located on heavy alluvial soils at the bottom of a valley. It has a rich variety of flora, including the herbs cowslip, cuckooflower and ragged robin, together with the largest population in East Anglia of the rare snake's head fritillary.[177] | |||
Foxhole Heath | 85.2 hectares (211 acres)[178] | YES | Brandon 52°22′N 0°33′E / 52.37°N 0.55°E TL 736 781[178] | NCR,[179] SAC,[67][68] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation Archived 23 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine | The heath is mainly covered by lichens and mosses, with smaller areas of heather and grassland. Much of it is grazed by rabbits. There are three nationally rare plants, and one rare bird, the stone-curlew: over one percent of this species in Britain breed on the site, and they also use it as a gathering ground for their autumn migration.[180] | |||
Freston and Cutler's Woods with Holbrook Park | 142.0 hectares (351 acres)[181] | PP | Ipswich 52°01′N 1°08′E / 52.01°N 1.14°E TM 153 388[181] | SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These ancient woods have woodland types typical of spring-fed valleys and light sandy soils. Holbrook Park has coppice stools over 3 metres in diameter, among the largest in Britain. Sweet chestnut, which was introduced in the Middle Ages, is found widely, and other trees include the rare wild service tree.[182] | |||
Frithy and Chadacre Woods | 28.7 hectares (71 acres)[183] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°09′N 0°43′E / 52.15°N 0.72°E TL 859 536[183] | Map | Citation | These are ancient semi-natural woods of the wet ash and maple type. The diverse ground flora includes early purple orchid, twayblade, gromwell and bluebell.[184] | ||||
The Gardens, Great Ashfield | 3.8 hectares (9.4 acres)[185] | NO | Bury St Edmunds 52°16′26″N 0°55′37″E / 52.274°N 0.927°E TL 998 680[185] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These ancient meadows are traditionally managed by grazing and cutting for hay. They have a rich variety of flora, such as green-winged orchid, bee orchid, common twayblade, pepper saxifrage, adder's tongue fern and ox-eye daisy.[186] | ||||
Gedgrave Hall Pit | 0.6 hectares (1.5 acres)[187] | NO | Woodbridge 52°04′59″N 1°30′32″E / 52.083°N 1.509°E TM 405 485[187] | GCR,[188] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | The site consists to two pits dating to the early Pliocene Coralline Crag Formation. The smaller pit has many well-preserved mollusc fossils, whereas those in the larger pit are highly abraded and poorly preserved.[189] | |||
Gipping Great Wood | 25.9 hectares (64 acres)[190] | NO | Stowmarket 52°13′16″N 1°02′10″E / 52.221°N 1.036°E TM 075 624[190] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is an ancient coppice with standards wood with a variety of woodland types. There are many hornbeams, and other trees include oak and ash. Wet rides, a pond and a stream provide additional ecological interest.[191] | ||||
Glemsford Pits | 33.2 hectares (82 acres)[192] | PP | Sudbury 52°05′06″N 0°40′52″E / 52.085°N 0.681°E TL 838 463[192] | Map[d] | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | Thirteen species of dragonfly and damselfly have been recorded in these former gravel workings, including one which is rare in Britain, the ruddy darter dragonfly. Aquatic plants include the yellow water-lily and mare's tail.[193] | ||||
The Glen Chalk Caves, Bury St Edmunds | 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres)[194] | PP | Bury St Edmunds 52°14′53″N 0°43′44″E / 52.248°N 0.729°E TL 864 646[194] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | Tunnels totalling 200 metres in length radiate from a chalk pit, which also contains a disused lime kiln. The tunnels and kiln are used by five species of bat for hibernation, and the surrounding vegetation helps to maintain a suitable micro-climate in the caves. The principal species are Daubenton's, Natterer's and brown long-eared bats.[195] | ||||
Gosbeck Wood | 22.8 hectares (56 acres)[196] | YES | Ipswich 52°09′32″N 1°08′02″E / 52.159°N 1.134°E TM 145 556[196] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is an ancient coppice with standards wood mainly on boulder clay, with some areas of sandy soil. Dog's mercury is dominant in the ground flora, and other plants include spurge laurel, wood spurge, herb paris and hairy woodrush.[197] | ||||
Great Blakenham Pit | 2.3 hectares (5.7 acres)[198] | NO | Great Blakenham 52°06′25″N 1°05′13″E / 52.107°N 1.087°E TM 115 499[198] | GCR[199] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is described by Natural England as a key site for Pleistocene studies. It has a sequence of early and middle Pleistocene deposits, including from the ancient course of the River Thames through East Anglia, and from the severe Anglian ice age around 450,000 years ago.[200] | |||
Gromford Meadow | 1.7 hectares (4.2 acres)[201] | NO | Saxmundham 52°10′30″N 1°29′17″E / 52.175°N 1.488°E TM 386 587[201] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This unimproved base-rich meadow is fed by springs. It has diverse flora with meadowsweet dominant, and other plants include yellow rattle, meadow foxtail, ragged robin, marsh thistle and lesser spearwort.[202] | ||||
Groton Wood | 20.2 hectares (50 acres)[203] | YES | Sudbury 52°03′04″N 0°52′55″E / 52.051°N 0.882°E TL 977 431[203] | SWT[204] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | Fifteen species of butterfly have been recorded in this wood, including brimstones, speckled woods and purple hairstreaks. There are many wild cherry trees, and twenty-two seasonal ponds, which have scarce and protected great crested newts.[204] | |||
Gypsy Camp Meadows, Thrandeston | 2.4 hectares (5.9 acres)[205] | NO | Diss 52°21′11″N 1°06′04″E / 52.353°N 1.101°E TM 113 773[205] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These wet meadows on poorly drained boulder clay have a rich variety of flora, and drainage ditches, areas of drier grassland and hedges add to the diversity. Plants include early purple orchid, ragged robin, zig-zag clover and water avens.[206] | ||||
Hascot Hill Pit | 0.3 hectares (0.74 acres)[207] | NO | Stowmarket 52°08′35″N 1°00′32″E / 52.143°N 1.009°E TM 060 537[207] | GCR[208] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is the only known site to expose beach deposits of the late Pliocene and early Pleistocene Red Crag Formation. It has beach cobbles and fossils from a littoral fauna, whereas other Red Crag sites have deposits from deeper water facies.[209] | |||
Hay Wood, Whepstead | 10.4 hectares (26 acres)[210] | NO | Bury St Edmunds 52°11′20″N 0°38′42″E / 52.189°N 0.645°E TL 809 578[210] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This ancient wood on poorly drained boulder clay has coppice trees of small-leaved lime and field maple with an understorey of hazel. Flora include wood spurge, herb Paris, ramsons and early purple orchid.[211] | ||||
High House Meadows, Monewden | 3.0 hectares (7.4 acres)[212] | NO | Woodbridge 52°10′34″N 1°15′14″E / 52.176°N 1.254°E TM 226 581[212] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These unimproved meadows have diverse herbs typical of clay pastures. There are scarce species such as autumn crocus, green-winged orchid, sulphur clover and adders-tongue fern.[213] | ||||
Hintlesham Woods | 118.1 hectares (292 acres)[214] | PP | Ipswich 52°03′N 1°01′E / 52.05°N 1.01°E TM 063 433[214] | RSPB,[215] NCR[216] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These ancient coppice with standards woods are mainly oak with some ash and birch. The soils are boulder clay, which is covered in some areas with glacial sands. Ground flora include green hellebore, bird's-nest orchid and wood spurge.[217] | |||
Holton Pit | 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres)[218] | YES | Halesworth 52°20′31″N 1°31′44″E / 52.342°N 1.529°E TM 405 774[218] | GCR[219] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is the only site known to show the sequence of the early Pleistocene Westleton Beds together with the overlying Kesgrave Gravels. The Westleton Beds are a coastal gravel accumulation, and the site is close to their inland boundary and throws light on their spatial limits.[220] | |||
Hopton Fen | 15.3 hectares (38 acres)[221] | YES | Diss 52°22′55″N 0°55′19″E / 52.382°N 0.922°E TL 990 800[221] | SWT[222] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This reed-dominated fen has diverse flora, including devil's bit scabious, black bog-rush, bogbeana and early marsh orchid. The SWT is improving the site by excavating new pools, and introducing grazing to restore the open landscape.[222][223] | |||
Horringer Court Caves | 3.8 hectares (9.4 acres)[224] | NO | Bury St Edmunds 52°13′59″N 0°41′13″E / 52.233°N 0.687°E TL 836 628[224] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has over 500 metres (1,600 feet) of chalk mines, with five grilled entrances, which are used by bats for hibernation. They have been the subject of research since 1947. The main bats using the caves are Daubenton's, but other species include the very rare barbastelle, which have been recorded eight times in 36 years.[225] | ||||
How Hill Track | 3.1 hectares (7.7 acres)[226] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°21′29″N 0°34′23″E / 52.358°N 0.573°E TL 753 764[226] | SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is a grassland site which provides suitable conditions for seven rare plants, including perennial knawel, small alison, purple-stem cat's tail and sickle medick.[227] | |||
Hoxne Brick Pit | 1.3 hectares (3.2 acres)[228] | NO | Eye 52°20′38″N 1°11′31″E / 52.344°N 1.192°E TM 175 766[228] | GCR[229][230] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | In 1797, John Frere suggested that flint hand axes, which he found on this site in a deposit twelve feet deep, were weapons dating to a remote period, and this is the earliest recognition that hand axes were made by early humans. The world famous site also provides the type deposits of the Hoxnian Stage, an interglacial between around 424,000 and 374,000 years ago, which is named after the site.[231][232][233] | |||
Iken Wood | 5.3 hectares (13 acres)[234] | NO | Woodbridge 52°09′18″N 1°29′53″E / 52.155°N 1.498°E TM 394 565[234] | SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is probably the only ancient coppice wood on blown sand in Britain. Massive oak standards are dominant, and there are stools with a diameter of 3 metres (10 feet). Other trees include silver birch, holly and rowan.[235] | |||
Ipswich Heaths | 39.4 hectares (97 acres)[236] | YES | Ipswich 52°02′56″N 1°14′46″E / 52.049°N 1.246°E TM 227 439[236] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | The site consists of two separate areas in Martlesham Heath and Purdis Heath. They contain heather heath and acid grassland, with clumps of bracken and gorse. This mosaic of habitats is valuable for butterflies. such as the silver-studded blue, common blue and small heath.[237] | ||||
Kentwell Woods | 77.6 hectares (192 acres)[238] | PP | Sudbury 52°07′N 0°43′E / 52.12°N 0.71°E TL 856 496[238] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | There is a variety of different woodland types in this site, and the most common is the wet ash and maple, with hazel also common. They were managed as coppice with standards in the past, and have ground vegetation which is typical of ancient woods.[239] | ||||
Knettishall Heath | 91.7 hectares (227 acres)[240] | YES | Thetford 52°23′N 0°52′E / 52.39°N 0.87°E TL 951 804[240] | SWT[241] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | The site is heath and grassland, mainly on acidic soils, with areas of secondary woodland and wet hollows. There are heathland plants such as sheep's sorrel, tormentil, harebell and heath bedstraw, while wet areas have fen vegetation including water mint and yellow iris.[242] | |||
Lackford Lakes | 105.8 hectares (261 acres)[243] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°18′N 0°38′E / 52.3°N 0.64°E TL 803 707[243] | SWT[244] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | The lakes are disused sand and gravel pits in the valley of the River Lark. There are diverse dragonfly species, and many breeding and overwintering birds, including nationally important numbers of gadwalls and shovelers. Skylarks breed on dry grassland, and lapwings in marshy meadows.[245] | |||
Lakenheath Poor's Fen | 5.2 hectares (13 acres)[246] | NO | Brandon 52°24′58″N 0°30′00″E / 52.416°N 0.5°E TL 701 827[246] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is mainly fen with diverse flora, and there are also areas of damp grassland, ditches and dykes. The grassland is grazed by cattle, and it has flowering plants including marsh pennywort and cuckoo flower. The site has a nationally rare plant, marsh pea.[247] | ||||
Lakenheath Warren | 588.3 hectares (1,454 acres)[248] | PP | Brandon 52°23′N 0°35′E / 52.39°N 0.59°E TL 766 804[248] | NCR,[165] SAC,[67][68] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is the largest remaining area of heath in the Breckland, and it has a history of use for sheep grazing and as a rabbit warren going back to the thirteenth century, and continuing until the Second World War. There are several rare lichens and plants, and over fifty species of breeding birds.[249] | |||
Landguard Common | 30.5 hectares (75 acres)[250] | YES | Felixstowe 51°56′17″N 1°19′23″E / 51.938°N 1.323°E TM 285 318[250] | LNR[251] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This spit on the northern outskirts of Felixstowe has a vegetated shingle beach, which is a fragile and rare habitat. Flora include sea kale, yellow horned poppy, sea sandwort, sea campion and sea pea. Areas of saltmarsh provide cover for small birds.[252] | |||
Laurel Farm Meadow | 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres)[253] | YES | Halesworth 52°22′52″N 1°24′36″E / 52.381°N 1.41°E TM 322 814[253] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This mesotrophic grassland site has diverse flora, and it is a type of meadow which is rare in Britain and not found in mainland Europe. The soil is chalky clay which is seasonally waterlogged. There are eleven species of grass, herbs such as fairy flax and cowslip, and many green-winged orchids.[254] | ||||
Leiston - Aldeburgh | 534.8 hectares (1,322 acres)[255] | PP | Aldeburgh 52°11′N 1°36′E / 52.18°N 1.6°E TM 463 597[255] | LNR,[256] RSPB,[257] SCHAONB,[22] SM,[258] SPA[78][79] | Map | Citation Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This diverse site has open water, fen, acid grassland, scrub, woodland, heath and vegetated shingle. There are many breeding and overwintering birds, abundant dragonflies, and nationally scarce plants such as mossy stonecrop and clustered clover.[259] | |||
Lineage Wood & Railway Track, Long Melford | 78.7 hectares (194 acres)[260] | PP | Sudbury 52°06′N 0°46′E / 52.1°N 0.76°E TL 889 484[260] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | Lineage Wood has neutral grassland rides with diverse flora, especially orchids such as the greater butterfly, fly orchid, common spotted and bee orchid. 22 species of butterfly have been recorded. The disused railway line also has floristically rich grassland, but the soil is more alkaline.[261] | ||||
Lingwood Meadows | 2.7 hectares (6.7 acres)[262] | NO | Stowmarket 52°10′59″N 1°05′38″E / 52.183°N 1.094°E TM 116 584[262] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These ancient meadows are one of the few surviving examples of unimproved grassland in the county. They have diverse flora, and 20 grass species have been recorded with red fescue and Yorkshire fog dominant. 55 other species include the nationally scarce sulphur clover.[263] | ||||
Little Blakenham Pit | 3.4 hectares (8.4 acres)[264] | NO | Ipswich 52°06′00″N 1°04′34″E / 52.1°N 1.076°E TM 108 491[264] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | A 127-metre (417-foot) tunnel from one of these chalk pits is used by hibernating bats, and it is one of the largest underground roosts known in Britain. Around 450 bats use the tunnel, mainly Daubenton's. Bats also share a lime kiln with a badger sett. The site also has chalk grassland.[265] | ||||
Little Heath, Barnham | 46.2 hectares (114 acres)[266] | YES | Thetford 52°22′N 0°43′E / 52.37°N 0.72°E TL 850 781[266] | NCR,[267] SPA[58][59] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | Grazing by rabbits and sheep helps to keep the sward on parts of this site as open grassland, but some parts have been invaded by self-sown woodland. The diverse flora in areas grazed by sheep includes field woodrush, hare’s foot clover and harebell. Stone-curlews nest on short and open turf.[268] | |||
London Road Industrial Estate, Brandon | 0.1 hectares (0.25 acres)[269] | YES | Brandon 52°26′20″N 0°36′25″E / 52.439°N 0.607°E TL 773 855[269] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This very small meadow in the middle of an industrial estate has been designated an SSSI because it has the largest known wild population in Britain of the nationally rare sunflower Artemisia campestris, which is thought to have survived due to periodic soil disturbance.[7] | ||||
Lordswell Field | 3.2 hectares (7.9 acres)[270] | YES | Brandon 52°23′31″N 0°32′02″E / 52.392°N 0.534°E TL 725 801[270] | NCR[179] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This area of calcareous Breckland heath has a rich variety of flora including two nationally rare plants, spanish catchfly and perennial knawel, the latter of which is protected under Section 13 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. There is also an area of lichen heath.[271] | |||
Maidscross Hill | 44.8 hectares (111 acres)[272] | YES | Brandon 52°25′N 0°32′E / 52.41°N 0.54°E TL 728 823[272] | LNR,[273] NCR[179] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This very dry grassland has four nationally rare plants, Breckland wild thyme, Spanish catchfly, grape hyacinth and sickle medick. The site is not grazed, which has allowed invasion by bracken and scrub, but also increased the nesting sites for birds.[274] | |||
Major Farm Meadow | 1.8 hectares (4.4 acres)[275] | NO | Eye 52°18′32″N 1°06′29″E / 52.309°N 1.108°E TM 120 724[275] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is one of the few surviving unimproved hay meadows in the county. It is damp grassland on boulder clay, with diverse flora and many molehills. Flowering plants include cowslip, twayblade and green-winged orchid, and there is a mature specimen of the rare black poplar.[276] | ||||
Metfield Meadow | 1.3 hectares (3.2 acres)[277] | YES | Halesworth 52°22′05″N 1°22′52″E / 52.368°N 1.381°E TM 303 798[277] | SWT[278] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This meadow on a disused airfield is unimproved grassland, with a rich variety of flora on chalky boulder clay. There are many green-winged orchids, cowslips and pepper saxifrages.[279] The meadow is grazed by cattle or cut for hay to maintain the diversity of the wild flowers.[278] | |||
Mickfield Meadow | 1.9 hectares (4.7 acres)[280] | YES | Stowmarket 52°13′30″N 1°08′10″E / 52.225°N 1.136°E TM 143 632[280] | SWT[281] | Map | Citation Archived 7 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine | Fertilisers and herbicides have never been used on this meadow, and as a result it has a rich variety of flora, including fritillary. The dominant grasses are meadow foxtail, cocksfoot, false oat-grass, timothy and Yorkshire fog.[282] | |||
Middle Wood, Offton | 23.3 hectares (58 acres)[283] | YES | Ipswich 52°06′32″N 1°00′18″E / 52.109°N 1.005°E TM 059 499[283] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is a medieval coppice with standards wood on wet boulder clay, and it has very diverse ground flora, including species typical of ancient woodland. Oak is the main standard tree, and there are orchids such as common twayblade, early purple orchid and butterfly orchid.[284] | ||||
Milden Thicks | 42.3 hectares (105 acres)[285] | NO | Ipswich 52°04′N 0°50′E / 52.06°N 0.84°E TL 951 444[285] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These are diverse mature woods, described by Natural England as of national importance for the comparisons which can be made between them. There are several wild service trees, and the ground flora is rich and typical of ancient woodland.[286] | ||||
Minsmere–Walberswick Heaths and Marshes | 2,327.0 hectares (5,750 acres)[287] | PP | Saxmundham 52°17′N 1°37′E / 52.28°N 1.62°E TM 469 712[287] | NCR,[288] NNR,[15][289][290] Ramsar,[291][292] RSPB[293] SAC,[294][295] SCHAONB,[22] SPA,[296][297] SWT[298][299] | Map | Citation | This is described by Natural England as a site of exceptional scientific interest, with areas of mudflats, shingle beach, reedbeds, heathland and grazing marsh. The marshes have many species of invertebrates, including rare ones, and the heathland is a habitat for two nationally declining birds, nightjars and woodlarks.[300] | |||
Moat Farm Meadows | 3.3 hectares (8.2 acres)[301] | NO | Ipswich 52°09′40″N 1°14′46″E / 52.161°N 1.246°E TM 221 564[301] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | These calcareous meadows are traditionally cut for hay. They have diverse flora, with many green-winged orchids and one of the largest populations in the county of meadow saffron. Other species include ox-eye daisy and cuckoo flower.[302] | ||||
Monewden Meadows | 3.7 hectares (9.1 acres)[303] | YES | Woodbridge 52°10′01″N 1°15′18″E / 52.167°N 1.255°E TM 227 571[303] | NCR,[57] SWT[304] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has rich flora, and it is described by Natural England as probably the best example in the county of unimproved calcareous clay and neutral grassland. The herb species are especially diverse, including meadow saffron and green-winged orchid, and there are ancient fruit trees.[305] | |||
Nacton Meadows | 4.5 hectares (11 acres)[306] | YES | Ipswich 52°00′47″N 1°15′00″E / 52.013°N 1.25°E TM 231 399[306] | SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site has fen meadow and grasslands. Wetter areas have more diverse flora, including Yorkshire-fog, crested dog's tail, sharp-flowered rush, greater bird's-foot-trefoil and the uncommon marsh arrowgrass.[307] | |||
Neutral Farm Pit, Butley | 1.1 hectares (2.7 acres)[308] | YES | Woodbridge 52°06′22″N 1°27′40″E / 52.106°N 1.461°E TM 371 510[308] | GCR,[309] SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This is described by Natural England as a classic site in the study of the Early Pleistocene in East Anglia. It was used by the nineteenth-century geologist Frederick W. Harmer to define his Butley division of the Red Crag Formation, and it has many fossils of marine molluscs.[310] | |||
Newbourne Springs | 15.7 hectares (39 acres)[311] | YES | Woodbridge 52°02′35″N 1°18′25″E / 52.043°N 1.307°E TM 269 435[311] | SWT[312] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | Most of this site is a narrow valley with a fast-flowing stream with alder carr and fen. Drier and more acidic soils have grassland, woodland, scrub and bracken heath. The site is actively managed, producing diverse flora and many breeding and migratory birds such as treecreepers, nuthatches and sedge warblers.[312][313] | |||
Newmarket Heath | 279.3 hectares (690 acres)[314] | PP | Newmarket 52°14′N 0°22′E / 52.24°N 0.37°E TL 622 627[314] | Map | Citation | Most of this site is chalk grassland, and it has areas of chalk heath, a rare habitat in Britain. There is a rich variety of flowering plants, including a nationally rare species listed in the British Red Data Book of threatened species and five nationally uncommon ones. The dominant grasses are upright brome and sheep's fescue.[315] | ||||
Norton Wood | 24.8 hectares (61 acres)[316] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°14′35″N 0°53′10″E / 52.243°N 0.886°E TL 971 645[316] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This ancient coppice with standards wood is on sand and loess over boulder clay. There are many pedunculate oak, hazel, ash and birch trees. The ground flora includes a number of uncommon plants such as oxlip.[317] | ||||
Orwell Estuary | 1,335.5 hectares (3,300 acres)[318] | PP | Ipswich 52°00′N 1°14′E / 52°N 1.23°E TM 221 380[318] | Ramsar,[319][320] SCHAONB,[22] SPA,[321][322] SWT[323] | Map | Citation Archived 5 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | The estuary is described by Natural England as of national importance for its breeding avocets, its other breeding and wintering birds, its vascular plants and its intertidal mud habitats. It also has a rich and diverse assemblage of invertebrates and a nationally important community of algae.[324] | |||
Over and Lawn Woods | 45.3 hectares (112 acres)[325] | NO | Haverhill 52°07′N 0°23′E / 52.11°N 0.39°E TL 635 483[325] | Map | Citation | These are ancient coppice with standards woods on chalky boulder clay, and the dominant trees are pedunculate oak and ash. The fauna and flora is diverse, including the nationally restricted oxlip. A stream and pond provide additional ecological interest.[326] | ||||
Pakefield to Easton Bavents | 735.4 hectares (1,817 acres)[327] | PP | Beccles 52°23′N 1°42′E / 52.38°N 1.7°E TM 519 818[327] | GCR[328][329][330] NNR,[15][331] SCHAONB,[22] SAC,[332][333] SPA[334][335] | Map | Citation | The site is described by Natural England as nationally important for its exposures of the Lower Pleistocene Norwich Crag Formation, its vegetated shingle features, saline lagoons, flood-plain fens, its nationally scarce vascular plants, and its scarce breeding birds and wintering bitterns.[336] | |||
Pakenham Meadows | 5.8 hectares (14 acres)[337] | YES | Bury St Edmunds 52°16′55″N 0°50′02″E / 52.282°N 0.834°E TL 934 686[337] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This unimproved and poorly drained meadow has a variety of soil types from loam to peat, and the vegetation types are correspondingly diverse. The herb-rich grassland has yellow rattle, bugle, fen bedstraw, oxe-eye daisy, ragged robin and southern marsh orchid.[338] | ||||
Pashford Poor's Fen, Lakenheath | 12.4 hectares (31 acres)[339] | NO | Lakenheath 52°25′23″N 0°32′46″E / 52.423°N 0.546°E TL 732 836[339] | Map | Citation Archived 13 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This diverse site has species rich meadows, hollows with fen and marshes, birch woodland, scrub and reedbeds. The invertebrate fauna is diverse, and includes the last known British site for a beetle listed on the Red Data Book of Threatened Species.[340] | ||||
Potton Hall Fields, Westleton | 16.7 hectares (41 acres)[341] | NO | Saxmundham 52°16′41″N 1°35′56″E / 52.278°N 1.599°E TM 456 705[341] | SCHAONB[22] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This site comprises two gently sloping fields on sandy, well drained soil. It has been designated an SSSI because it has a population of several thousand plants of the nationally rare red-tipped cudweed in large patches. The plant is only found in two other counties in Britain.[342] | |||
RAF Lakenheath | 111.0 hectares (274 acres)[343] | NO | Brandon 52°25′N 0°34′E / 52.41°N 0.56°E TL 743 822[343] | SAC[67][68] | Map | Citation Archived 4 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine | This grassland site on well-drained sandy soils has more rare plants than any other site in the county, including perennial knawel, Breckland thyme, wild grape hyacinth, sand catchfly, drooping brome and smooth rupturewort. There are also 22 nationally rare and 47 nationally scarce invertebrates.[344] | |||
Ramsholt Cliff |