UK Nature and Environment

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Our current banner is a shot of Walberswick marshes, Suffolk by GreyShuck.

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826
 
 

First Minister John Swinney has ruled out the legal reintroduction of lynx into the wild in Scotland.

His comments follow concerns about the illegal release of four lynx in the Cairngorms last month.

Campaigners have been working on plans for the controlled reintroduction of the cats to benefit rural biodiversity but farmers have raised concerns about the impact they would have on livestock.

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All animals live in or seek a set of climate conditions they find tolerable. This “climate envelope” partially determines where animals are found, but the continued existence of many species now rests on the outcome of human-driven climate change.

Rising temperatures are moving the available climate niches of many species into areas which were previously too cool. While their ranges shift poleward or to higher elevations, their habitat downslope or closer to the equator shrinks, as it becomes too hot to live in.

Flying and marine animals are relatively free to follow these shifting niches. Birds and butterflies are two examples. New species arrive regularly in the UK with the warming climate and are generally met with excitement by enthusiasts and scientists alike, given that they are a natural effort by a species to make the best of a difficult situation.

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Three men have been arrested as part of an investigation into the large-scale, illegal dumping of waste at woodland in Kent.

Two men, aged 44 and 62 and from the Isle of Sheppey, and a 41-year-old man from Sittingbourne, were arrested on Wednesday in connection with the dumping at Hoads Wood, near Ashford, the Environment Agency (EA) said.

A criminal investigation was launched in 2023 after 30,000 tonnes of household and construction waste, piled 15 feet high in places, was discovered dumped in a large part of the wood, which is designated a site of special scientific interest.

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Back in March last year, the Government announced that Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust was set to receive £875,602 funding support to lead an ambitious partnership to enhance, restore and create vital wildlife habitats in the Trent Valley.

Project partners include Canal & River Trust; Derbyshire Wildlife Trust; Gedling Conservation Trust, Nottingham City Council; RSPB; Severn Trent Water and Trent Rivers Trust.

The Thriving in a Wilder Trent project was set up to enhance existing habitats and create new areas of habitats to benefit a range of species from common terns to bitterns and otters across the Trent Valley.

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New research from Wildlife and Countryside Link, as part of its Wilder By Design nature-friendly planning reform campaign, has found that just 680 hectares of land offsite and 93 ha on-site has been reported by Local Authorities under the BNG scheme, since the policy's introduction[1]. This is just a fraction (less than 13%) of the 5,428 hectares of habitat Defra estimated was likely to be generated annually by BNG and is less than half the minimum amount of habitat expected to be delivered per year.

BNG was developed as part of the Environment Act and came into force on 12 February last year. The policy requires developers to create or enhance habitat to compensate for any harm to nature from new developments and deliver at least 10% “biodiversity net gain” (measured by the quality, extent, significance and type of habitats created). Developers are able to undertake nature recovery work on-site, or by purchasing credits for off-site habitat enhancements.

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A council is proposing to remove the second-best place for nightingales in the UK from its local plan for 1,000 new homes, in a win for community campaigners and environmentalists.

Middlewick Ranges, a former Ministry of Defence firing range on the southern edge of Colchester, is set to be dropped from the city council’s allocated housing sites after councillors heeded a growing array of ecological evidence highlighting its national importance for nature.

According to experts, Middlewick meets or exceeds the criteria for a site of special scientific interest (SSSI) in six categories – for its endangered nightingales, rare barbastelle bats, range of invertebrates, rare acid grassland, waxcap fungi and veteran trees.

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A FOUR-YEAR project has recorded more than 20,000 butterflies of 28 species in the heart of London.

The scheme also recorded more than 1,200 moths of 150 species in parks, allotments, graveyards and community gardens.

National charity Butterfly Conservation, which launched the Big City Butterflies initiative in 2021, says the results show that wildlife can thrive in towns and cities with the right management and the support of local communities.

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Aiming to reverse a nationwide depletion of habitats, and seeking to achieve net zero by 2050, the UK government is using a range of policy initiatives and programmes to invest in our land and water-based environments. To make sure these actions are effective, it’s essential that decision-makers have accurate and up-to-date evidence.

The Natural Capital and Ecosystem Assessment (NCEA) is a Defra-led science and innovation programme, working across both land and water environments. It collects data on the extent, condition and change over time of England’s ecosystems and natural capital and quantifies the benefits to society they provide. Forest Research is at the heart of the programme, collecting data on trees, woodlands and forest habitats, building software solutions and delivering mapping products.

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Evidence of the extent of the world’s plastic litter problem is washing up on Guernsey’s beaches with every tide.

But it does not go unnoticed. It is being removed and catalogued. A group of Guernsey beachcombers, united under the Facebook group Found on the Beach in Guernsey, “womble” across the island’s bays on a daily basis and share their evidence with the marine biologist Richard Lord.

He cleans, reinflates and collects plastic water bottles, along with other kinds of waste, in his garden shed at his St Peter Port home, less than half a mile from the sea.

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It’s National Nest Box Week (NNBW) next week and Northumberland Wildlife Trust is encouraging everybody to install a nest box in their area and give the region’s precious birds a home.

National Nest Box Week, celebrated each year from 14 - 21 February, is an initiative designed to encourage people to help provide homes for birds by putting up nest boxes in gardens, on balconies, in parks, and in open spaces.

As the natural nest sites on which many of our birds depend, such as holes in trees and buildings, are fast disappearing and gardens and woods are ‘tidied’ and old houses are repaired, more and more birds are relying on humans for help.

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In the green acres of a big country manor, a group of rangers and volunteers are searching for two rewilding beavers that have made their second "great escape".

It is believed Woody and Twiggy found their way out of the Mapperton Estate during bad weather that damaged their large enclosure.

The Eurasian pair were introduced to West Dorset from Scotland in 2022 under licence from Natural England, but have not been seen since January 2024.

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The latest official statistic report of 66 Scottish terrestrial breeding bird species shows increases for 36 of them between 1994 and 2023, with 23 species indicator results showing decline and seven remaining stable. Woodland birds have seen the largest indicator increase of over 50%. Chiffchaff numbers have increased 1428% - most probably driven by increasing temperatures – as well as great spotted woodpeckers by 699% and blackcap by 593%.

Chaffinches are one of our commonest birds, and a regular species in gardens and woodland, but they have recently declined by 13% in part due to the suspected presence of the bird parasite Trichomonas gallinae, which is linked to unhygienic bird feeding areas. Climate change, evidenced by milder winters, is also contributing to these declines. A decline of 17% in Capercaillie has been linked to death from collisions with fences and potentially a negative effect of rising temperatures from climate change.

However, upland birds have shown the largest declines (-20%). Long-term changes in upland bird populations have been contributed to by several factors, including climate change, forest expansion, and changes in site-based management practices such as grazing and predator control. Curlew breeding numbers have declined over 60%, and changes to land management, climate and food availability are all having an impact. Targeted action is taking place in Scotland to help restore suitable breeding habitats and research is underway to help improve our understanding of the declines.

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A badger appearing to admire a Banksy-style graffiti version of itself has won the Natural History Museum's 2024 Wildlife Photographer of the Year People's Choice Award.

Captured on a quiet road in St Leonards-on-Sea, England by British photographer Ian Wood.

Ian had noticed badgers emerging from a nearby den to forage for food scraps left out for foxes.

"I spent the best part of two years photographing them, and this particular photo came about as an idea. I thought it'd be fun to put the graffiti there and see if I could get a badger walking underneath it," he told the BBC.

Ian sees a deeper message in his photo around the controversial subject of badger culling.

...

The 25 nominated images for this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year People's Choice Award received a record-breaking 76,000 votes from wildlife photography and nature fans worldwide.

In addition to the winning image, four other finalists were highly commended.

All five images will be displayed online and at London's Natural History Museum until 29 June.

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Following the successful restoration of the River Leven, an ambitious new project is underway to breathe life back into one of Fife’s cherished waterways.

Partners Fife Council, SEPA (Scottish Environment Protection Agency), and Fife Coast and Countryside Trust are joining forces to restore a 5.8-kilometre stretch of the Back Burn – also known locally as the Conland, Coul, and Balbirnie Burn – between Rhind Hill in the Lomond Hills and Newton, just north of Markinch.

The Restoring the Back Burn project, a vital part of the wider Leven Programme, aims to return this historically significant waterway to a more natural state.

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Animal welfare campaigners are urging the Government to end the use of snares in England after polling suggests the public would support a ban.

Certain types of the hunting devices, which catch animals such as foxes and rabbits around the neck like a lasso, are legal in England but not Scotland or Wales.

Labour pledged to ban snares in England in its general election manifesto last year.

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Hundreds of acres of wood pasture habitat are being created in a scheme to boost native songbirds and other wildlife alongside farming.

The National Trust is supporting some of its tenant farmers across Purbeck in Dorset to use funding from the Government’s nature-friendly farming programme to establish 380 hectares (940 acres) of wildlife-rich habitat.

The farmers are planting 60,000 trees and shrubs over the next six years to create wood pasture that provides important nesting, roosting and foraging sites for birds such as yellowhammer, linnet and goldfinches, as well as rare turtle doves and nightingales.

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Nearly 40 rare species have been recorded in the New Forest during a project to restore areas for nature.

The species were identified during surveys undertaken by Wild New Forest last year as part of the Species Survival Fund, which is restoring and creating habitats to halt species decline.

The surveys were completed at 10 sites, mostly around the northern and southern fringes of the New Forest National Park.

‘In total, about 860 species were recorded during the surveys, including 370 animals, 265 plants, and 225 fungi,’ explained Prof Russell Wynn, Director of Wild New Forest.

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Ripon City Wetlands is one of Yorkshire Wildlife Trust’s newest reserves, created at the side of Ripon Racecourse, where new islands have been created on both the canal and riverside lagoons.

As well as its famous starling murmurations, Ripon City Wetlands is renowned for sand martins, lapwings and little ringed plovers in the spring, and these new islands will create the perfect breeding grounds for these spring visitors.

At nearby Staveley, the existing islands in the West Lagoon had become overgrown with vegetation, making them unusable for many nesting waders.

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Environmental organisations “are still very white, especially at the top”, the co-director of Greenpeace has said as research showed little to no improvement in the ethnic diversity of their workforces.

Areeba Hamid’s comments came as the third annual racial action on the climate emergency (Race) report into diversity among environmental charities found fewer than one in 20 of those working in the sector identified as people of colour or as other racial or ethnic minority groups.

The average among the UK workforce is 16%, or just more than one in eight.

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The Tree Council and Network Rail are aiming to plant thousands of trees in hundreds of communities across the country as their award-winning partnership is renewed for an additional five-year period.

While the previous agreement resulted in the successful planting of more than 350,000 saplings in 180 communities, along with aftercare to secure the trees’ future, the new contract sees Network Rail pledging £1.2 million towards tree establishment and care across three Network Rail regions in England—Eastern, Northwest and Central, and Southern—along with the company’s national Route Services function. The renewed partnership supports Network Rail’s ambition to achieve biodiversity net gain across its land by 2035.

The Tree Council will support local authorities, community groups, and other conservation organisations to establish trees, hedgerows, and orchards, nationwide, from small “tree whips” to more mature specimens. These efforts will help tackle climate change and empower communities to improve their surroundings and benefit from improved green spaces, increased tree canopy cover, better air quality, richer wildlife, and biodiversity. The programme also aims to deliver positive social value, teaching new skills and inspiring young people to explore green careers.

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Cat lovers have been left hissing at a proposal to restrict areas where their beloved pets are allowed to roam and hunt wildlife.

With some 27 million birds slain each year, a new report is advising the Scottish Government to take drastic measures that include keeping cats locked inside - and even banning ownership altogether.

The Scottish Animal Welfare Commission (SAWC) also suggested setting up ‘cat containment areas’ - designated parts of the country where compulsory restrictions could be put in place to prevent pet cats from roaming and hunting.

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Ongoing work to restore and protect globally important habitats is being celebrated as part of World Wetlands Day this Sunday.

Through a combination of best practice and its own innovative techniques, Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS) is balancing commercial forestry with protecting and enhancing wetland habitat including landscape-scale peatland restoration, valuable river restoration and the creation of new ponds in suitable parts of its estate.

In the past year, FLS hit the milestone of setting 10,000 hectares of peatland on the road to recovery through ‘re-wetting’ sites across Scotland. This included playing a key role in the restoration work in The Flow Country, which recently became the world’s first peatland World Heritage Site.

Colin Edwards, Head of Environment with FLS said: “World Wetlands Day is a great way to help maintain everyone’s focus on the importance of restoring these habitats.

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The dates and fundraising project for this year's Global Birdfair have been announced.

The event organisers have confirmed that Lyndon Top, on the shores of Rutland Water, will once again be the venue, with the 2025 event taking place from Friday 11-Sunday 13 July.

Furthermore, Global Birdfair revealed that this year's conservation project will be Safeguarding Ocean Species (SOS), a scheme that creates awareness in the South Pacific region about the damage that bycatch from the longline fishing industry causes to seabirds including Antipodean Albatross, the flagship bird of the programme.

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At the head of beautiful Loch Long in Argyll sits one of Scotland's biggest plastic problems.

A combination of prevailing winds and the rotation of the earth drive litter up the loch to create what is known as the Arrochar litter sink.

About 62,000 items wash up on the beach each year, much of it from the waterways in and around Glasgow, Scotland’s largest city.

It is estimated that 11% of the rubbish which enters the River Clyde - which flows through the city - and its tributaries is eventually washed up at Arrochar.

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A project to restore a large area of community woodland in east Kent which was badly damaged by fire is "showing signs of positive results", its organisers have said.

Dane Valley Woods in Margate, established on a former landfill site, is a wild space run by volunteers "for the benefit of both people and wildlife".

It was devastated by fire in August 2022 and the community has been working since to restore it to its former glory.

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