With only 5 per cent of rivers in England and Wales described as being in a pristine condition a new survey has been launched by a coalition of conservationists to celebrate and bring attention to some of Britain's best loved and long forgotten rivers.
 The Our  Rivers Campaign, which includes the Angling Trust, the RSPB, the Salmon and  Trout Association and WWF-UK,  is calling on people to take part in the  first ever Our Rivers Awards by going online and voting for the 'best' or  'worst' river in England and Wales.
The Our  Rivers Campaign, which includes the Angling Trust, the RSPB, the Salmon and  Trout Association and WWF-UK,  is calling on people to take part in the  first ever Our Rivers Awards by going online and voting for the 'best' or  'worst' river in England and Wales.
  
  This could be  any river from a picturesque chalk steam to a waterway teeming with native  wildlife, or a river plagued by pollution and ruined by water abstraction.
  
  The first  person to cast their vote for the Our Rivers Awards was television presenter  and producer and keen conservationist Philippa Forrester who is currently  appearing in Halcyon River Diaries on BBC1. Other river enthusiasts, chef Tom  Aiken and wildlife writer, Steve Backshall have also named their favourite  rivers.
  
  Phillipa  Forrester said: "Living close to a river I get to see an amazing array of  life from the emergence of mayflies in Spring to the darting flash of a hunting  kingfisher and the secretive habits of the water vole. It may be small but my  vote has to go to the river which runs close to my home, the real star of the  Halcyon River Diaries, because it is a very special place for me."
  
  “We have to  do all we can to protect these vital wildlife habitats and I hope the Our  Rivers awards will highlight the pressures these waterways, and the life they  support, are facing.”
  Tom Aikten  has cast his vote for the River Yare in Cringleford near Norwich and Steve  Blackshall nominated the Upper Dart in Dartmoor.
  
  The Our  Rivers campaign was launched last year to campaign for clean, healthy rivers  across England and Wales. Soon after, a Government report on the state of the  country’s rivers found that 74 per cent are failing to meet European  environmental targets.
  
  The report  found that just five per cent of rivers in England and Wales remain in pristine  condition. The rest face a variety of pressures including; run off pollution  from fertilisers and poorly designed urban drainage, invasive riverbank species  like signal crayfish and American mink and low water levels caused by over  abstraction.
  
  Ralph  Underhill, Our Rivers campaigner, said: “This is the first time the public has  had a chance to vote for the river which is closest to the nation’s heart. This  award will be a great celebration of one of our richest wildlife habitats – and  one that everyone can enjoy because no-one is more than a few minutes from a  river, stream or brook. We want to celebrate the amazing rivers we have in  England and Wales, whilst raising awareness of the threats they face. By  casting your vote, you are speaking up for Our Rivers.”
  
To cast your  vote visit the Our River campaign website at www.ourrivers.org.uk.  Voting remains open until the end of British Summer Time on the 31st October  2010.
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