Several modest-sized signals were caught until Wendy McFarlane found the day’s prize catch; an enormous (but dead) male, with claws 10cms long!

After we had disinfected ourselves and our equipment back at our vehicles we moved on to our second stop; part of the River Wensum which supports a colony of non-native signal crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus). The River Wensum is here wide and shallow, with a substrate of sand and stones, and low clay banks fringed by woodland.

Signal crayfish in the net - Photo Alex Prendergast

It wasn’t long before Danny Thomas found the first signal crayfish, a small two year-old individual, but we hoped for much larger specimens! Several modest-sized signals were caught until Wendy McFarlane found the day’s prize catch; an enormous (but dead) male, with claws 10cms long! Signal crayfish burrows riddle the bank here to the extent that sections collapse, providing views of the interior of some burrows. Understandably no-one wanted to see if anything was living in the holes using the standard method of finger poking so we resorted to sticks.

Once again we all disinfected and headed off to our third and final site on the bank of the River Yare below Norwich where Alex had previously recorded dead Turkish, or narrow-clawed crayfish (Astacus leptodactylus), and hoped to find some live animals. Here we checked refuge traps set a few nights earlier, but unfortunately nothing had moved in.

At the end of the day Alex invited all to the pub to discuss crayfish matters and study pickled specimens with crustacean colleagues. Surprisingly no-one accepted the offer and the rest of the group headed home only to be confronted by a tree blown onto the railway line by the day’s gales, which meant a long wait at Diss station; possibly still preferable to an evening with a jar of pickled crayfish.

We found white-clawed crayfish burrows and the braver amongst us poked in our fingers to see if anyone was at home, and to tempt them out.

Several members of The Ecology Consultancy’s staff met at our Norfolk office for an in-house workshop on white-clawed crayfish (Austropotamobius pallipes) run by The Ecology Consultancy’s crayfish expert and licensed surveyor Alex Prendergast. The main aims of the day were to develop familiarity with this often overlooked protected species, review survey methodologies and to understand the acute threats posed by non-native crayfish and disease, as well as to discuss issues on specific on-going projects. The white-clawed crayfish is protected under Schedule 5 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (as amended) making it illegal to disturb and take (including to handle) this species without a licence. It is also a BAP species across much of its range.

A morning classroom session focused on discussing identification, habitat requirements, survey methodology and biosecurity issues. We quickly devoured lunch and headed out into a blustery but sunny autumn day, for a whistle-stop tour of some of Norfolk’s crayfish hotspots.

First stop was a river near Norwich which supports one of Norfolk’s few remaining natural populations of white-clawed crayfish. Duly disinfected we headed down to the river where Alex demonstrated a technique for sampling amongst roots and vegetation. Michelle Fielden soon caught our first (and only) white-clawed crayfish of the day, a medium-sized female, which was passed around the group for inspection. Walking slowly upstream we saw various habitats used by crayfish and practised a range of survey techniques including stone-turning (part of the ‘Standard Technique’) on a patch of riffle. We found white-clawed crayfish burrows and the braver amongst us poked in our fingers to see if anyone was at home, and to tempt them out. (A consideration when doing this is to avoid poking a water vole, which are easily angered and bite!) Here we also found several bullhead (Cottus gobio), and stone loach (Barbatula barbatula), a BAP species previously unfamiliar to most of us.