After a more than 100-year absence from the area, reintroducing wildcats to the South West could help to secure the future of the UK’s most critically endangered mammal.
Today, the cross-party Environmental Audit Committee (EAC) have branded recent anti-nature rhetoric from the Treasury as a ‘lazy narrative’ when it comes to unlocking housebuilding.
This autumn, ‘unsung hero’ farmers are hard at work giving nature a helping hand for the seasons ahead, providing wildflower ...
As the Coronation Gardens for Food and Nature project comes to an end, we take a look at the impact on individuals, groups ...
Tim Hill, Conservation Manager with Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust, is an enthusiast for dead and rotten wood and the animals that depend on it. Read on and find out why decaying trunks, rotting ...
This year the 30th climate COP (COP30) is taking place from 10th November to 21st November, in Belém, Brazil. This focuses on ...
Living up to its name, the red-tailed bumblebee is black with a big, red 'tail'. The red-tailed bumblebee is a very common bumblebee, emerging early in the spring and feeding on flowers right through ...
It's easy to see where the blue shark got its name from. These sleek, elegant sharks have beautiful metallic blue backs which provide brilliant camouflage out in the open ocean. Globally, the blue ...
Spot these giants of the bumblebee world during springtime. They can be seen buzzing from flower to flower getting their pollen fix. Buff-tailed bumblebees are the biggest of the bumblebees and emerge ...
This beautiful butterfly is one of our rarest, now mostly restricted to the western parts of the UK. As the name suggests, the marsh fritillary is often found in wet and boggy places, like damp ...
The Brown argus favours open, chalk and limestone grasslands, but can also be spotted on coastal dunes, in woodland clearings and along disused railways. The Brown argus is a small butterfly that is ...
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