MORE than half the chalk streams and a quarter of rivers in England are at risk of drying out as too much water is being pumped out of them, wildlife experts have warned.

One of those is the Itchen in Hampshire which is suffering from over extraction by Southern Water, figures from Freedom of Information requests by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) suggest.

If too much water continues to be taken out of rivers for public supplies and agriculture, reducing their flows, it will hit wildlife such as threatened water voles and kingfishers, the conservation charity said.

The warning comes as parts of the UK face the possibility of drought following low winter rainfall, which the WWF said could push wildlife to the brink.

April was “exceptionally” dry, with most of the UK receiving less than half the average rainfall for the month, and southern England has seen the driest July to April in records stretching back more than 100 years.

Tanya Steele, chief executive of WWF, said: “If we have a dry summer our green and pleasant land could become as parched as some of the Mediterranean.

“This may sound attractive for sun-seekers, but in fact it would be disastrous for wildlife.

“It would mean hundreds of millions of pounds of damage, tens of thousands of fish dying, and serious declines of some of our most loved wetland species.”

The charity is calling for the Government to ensure all EU water and environmental rules are transferred into UK law to safeguard nature, and for urgent action at the 555 river water bodies where abstraction is already causing damage.

Water companies must set out long-term wastewater plans to stop sewage polluting rivers, and environmental regulators should be given the power to ensure all abstraction is sustainable.

The WWF also wants to see a national strategy to reduce water waste.

In a campaign backed by rivers trusts and angling clubs, the charity is urging people to find out the state of their local river and ask their MP to put pressure on new Environment Secretary Michael Gove to protect the waterways.