Rötgesbütteler Riede

History Map of Rötgesbütteler Riede

Called The Rötgesbütteler Riede ( riverine code 48186 ), also Ausbütteler Riede thing or bank Riede, is a creek on the central Pape Teicher plateau with about 40 km ² catchment area between Braunschweig and Gifhorn. The creek empties into the Aller Canal and part of the river system of the Aller.

Topography

The creek originates southeast of Rötgesbüttel in a deciduous forest between the villages of Rethen and Rötgesbüttel. The creek flows past from its source in the north to Rötgesbüttel. On the northern edge of the village he takes on treated waste water from local ponds. In its course the creek today follows roughly the route of the national highway 4 and the Railway Brunswick- Uelzen between My and Ausbüttel. Here flows the stream in the "old bones Riede ," the former riverbed of the secret vineyard. The construction of the Allerkanals Bach underflows were changed, so that parts of the former secret Riede are now only available as a slew of other streams. About the "old bones Riede " opens the Rötgesbütteler Riede in the Allerkanal.

History

In the early days, the creek was right in the Northern Forest. Before the colonization of the Papenteich during the Saxon wars, probably from the 8th century, was located south-east of the creek Rötgesbüttel a Dingstätte. Even the former name thing Riede Bank refers to this old Dingstätte. Thing places were places for folk and court gatherings after the old Germanic law.

Flora and Fauna

The Rötgesbütteler Riede is a very strong begradigtes and artificially deeper waters, which dries in the summer months, partially. The stream runs in its upper reaches by a deciduous forest, later mainly by green areas with only a few shady trees. Due to the strong sunlight of the creek in the summer verkrautet therefore very strong. The waters there are grounds in the upper reaches, as in the Lüneburg Heath common of sand and fine gravel. After the inflow from the lagoons of the reason is mainly covered with sludge.

The water quality report of Lower Saxony could not classify the stream by the frequent Trockenfallungen. It was found that the burden of the waste water in the course of the stream is plummeting. The underflow could therefore be classified as moderately polluted (class II -III).

Floating aquatic organisms are largely absent from the Rötgesbütteler Riede. Nevertheless, 10 species found to be out on the Red List of Lower Saxony:

  • Two different types of caddisflies
  • Five different types of long- button water beetles
  • As a subset of bladder snails
  • A subspecies of the plate screw
  • The Banded Demoiselle
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