Cors Fochno | |
Borth Bog | |
UNESCO biosphere reserve | |
Cors Fochno, Aberleri Nature Reserve
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Country | Wales |
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County | Ceredigion |
Location | Borth |
- coordinates | 52°30′14″N 4°02′31″W / 52.50376°N 4.04193°WCoordinates: 52°30′14″N 4°02′31″W / 52.50376°N 4.04193°W |
Biome | Raised bog |
Plants | Bracken, gorse, heather, Scots pine |
Animals | Adder, badger, blackcap, buzzard, Dartford warbler, fallow deer, nightingale, nightjar, willow warbler, woodcock, Otters, red kites, peregrines, hen harriers, Welsh Mountain Ponies |
Free | |
Designated | 5 January 1976 |
Cors Fochno is a raised peat mire located near to the village of Borth, in the county of Ceredigion, Wales. Lying on the south side of the Dyfi estuary, it forms a component part of the Dyfi National Nature Reserve. It was designated a UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) biosphere reserve in 1976, and is the only such reserve in Wales.
A significant portion of the 652 acres (264 ha) former peatland complex was taken for agriculture; the surviving core area supports the largest expanse of primary near-natural raised bog in an estuarine context within the United Kingdom.
Part of the Dyfi National Nature Reserve, Cors Fochno contains several varieties of peat moss and carnivorous plant.
Otters, red kites, common buzzards, peregrines and hen harriers can be found here together with a number of Welsh Mountain Ponies, and adder, badger, blackcap, Dartford warbler, fallow deer, nightingale, nightjar, willow warbler, and woodcock. The site holds a population of rosy marsh moth, a very rare species in the UK.