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UK Nature and Environment
UK Nature and Environment

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Community Specific Rules:

  • Keep posts UK-specific. There are other places on Lemmy to post articles which relate to global environmental issues (e.g. slrpnk.net).
  • Keep comments in English so that they can be appropriately moderated.

Note: Our temporary logo is from The Wildlife Trusts. We are not officially associated with them.

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

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Posts
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Created
2 yr. ago
  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    Gardeners are being urged to resist mowing their entire lawns in efforts to support struggling butterfly populations.

    Last year was one of the worst years on record for butterflies, according to the results of Butterfly Conservation's Big Butterfly Count.

    Experts at the organisation say mixed lengths of grass are best for providing food and shelter, ideally with naturally occuring plants such as dandelions left to flower.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    The government is failing to support the natural regeneration of trees in England owing to an overwhelming focus on planting, campaigners have said.

    Recent figures show only 5% of Forestry Commission grants for woodland creation have been spent on the natural regeneration of trees, while the remaining 95% is spent on tree planting.

    Natural regeneration is a process through which trees grow and reproduce in the wild without human interference by self-seeding, growing new stems from roots and natural seed colonisation.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    The arrival of new plant pests and diseases is likely to severely damage UK trees and woodlands in the coming decades, new research shows.

    The ash dieback epidemic prompted the government to assess all pests and diseases that could potentially enter the UK and affect our trees and agricultural crops.

    In the new study, University of Exeter scientists assessed the 636 tree pests and diseases to work out the invasion probability and likely effects on tree growth.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    New modelling tool may protect seabirds from wind-farm impacts

    Scientists at the University of Glasgow have developed a new modelling tool to improve protection for seabird species impacted by offshore wind farms.

    The tool, published in Methods in Ecology and Evolution, is the first to accurately predict the space used by seabird colonies without relying on large amounts of satellite-tracking data, which is often unavailable.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    For years, conservationists have been working to bring native trees back to the spectacular Glen Rosa on the Isle of Arran.

    But a decade of effort was wiped out in days when a wildfire ripped across the valley earlier this month.

    "It was years of our work going up in flames," Kate Sampson, the National Trust for Scotland's senior ranger on Arran, told BBC Scotland News.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    DAERA Minister Andrew Muir has said Northern Ireland must take immediate action to protect its blue carbon habitats.

    The Minister was speaking as he launched Northern Ireland’s first Blue Carbon Action Plan at Mount Stewart in Co Down.

    Northern Ireland’s first Blue Carbon Action Plan, which contains 22 action points, will provide the foundation for the protection of our blue carbon habitats. It will also provide for nature-based solutions to mitigate climate change through the absorption of carbon dioxide in the Northern Ireland inshore area.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    The area of the UK burnt by wildfires so far this year is already higher than the total for any year in more than a decade, satellite data suggests.

    More than 29,200 hectares (292 sq km or 113 sq miles) has been burnt so far, according to figures from the Global Wildfire Information System, which has recorded burnt area since 2012.

    That is more than the previous high of 28,100 hectares for the whole year of 2019.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    Two wildlife charities are recruiting volunteers to help spot glow-in-the-dark caterpillars at night using ultraviolet lights.

    It is hoped the technique will make surveying butterflies and moths quicker and reveal secrets about their behaviour and evolution.

    The surveys are part of a conservation project covering Bernwood Forest, the River Ray and Otmoor Basin near Oxford.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    Farmers in Hampshire and West Sussex have successfully restored populations of lapwings that are facing extinction.

    They are encouraging the bird species, which is synonymous with farmland, to nest by keeping patches of fields uncultivated and protected from predators.

    But some are concerned about the future of such projects, after the government suddenly closed the Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) green funding scheme.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    An amendment to the Planning and Infrastructure Bill has been announced by Government to remove all statutory consultees from the Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects (NSIPs) pre-application process. See Planning reforms to slash a year off infrastructure delivery - GOV.UK.

    The Wildlife Trusts believe this is bad news for both nature recovery, communities and for infrastructure delivery. Pre-application is intended to be the crucial stage when, informed by consultation with experts, potential problems with major infrastructure projects are revealed and solutions found. This is also the stage where nature protection and restoration can be built into the early stages of a project – avoiding harm to precious nature sites, protecting community greenspaces and reducing costly project-stopping trouble later on.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    A rare pair of ospreys have laid their first egg in mid-Wales, which conservationists believe is the first such egg in the area for at least 250 years.

    It was laid in a nest near Talybont-on-Usk, near Brecon, Powys, and is a sign the "rare species is fighting back", said conservation group Usk Valley Ospreys.

    The species was wiped out in Wales in the 19th century due to persecution and habitat loss, but has been making a comeback in recent years due to conservation efforts.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    One in three Brits had admitted to doing nothing to support or protect struggling UK wildlife - despite nearly 9 in 10 saying they’re worried about its decline.

    According to a British Wildlife Insights 2025 report, compiled by biodiversity and ecology consultants Arbtech, nearly a third of Brits are taking no action to help wildlife in their local areas.

    33% of participants said they took no action to support wildlife, with a further 13% say they had no plans to ever take action. This was despite 88% of participants reporting to be concerned about the ongoing reduction of wildlife in the UK

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    More than 100 old landfills in England that may be contaminated with toxic substances have flooded since 2000, potentially posing a serious safety risk, it can be revealed.

    Some of these former dumps containing possibly hazardous materials sit directly next to public parks and housing estates with hundreds of households, the analysis by the Greenpeace-funded journalism website Unearthed , in partnership with the Guardian, found.

    Although councils are supposed to keep track of the dangers of these sites, funding has long since disappeared and some local authorities had no idea they were responsible, the investigation found.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    A new Official Statistic in Development has recently (Wednesday 23 April 2025) been released by JNCC that will track the status of threatened and declining marine habitats and species within the UK.

    This new indicator provides, for the first time, a comprehensive overview of threatened and declining marine habitats and species in the UK.

    The statistic has been specifically designed to support the government’s 25 Year Environment Plan as part of the Outcome Indicator Framework, which measures environmental changes linked to ten key goals. Results of this data will feed into the ‘Thriving Plants and Wildlife’ goal and will be included in the 2025/2026 reporting cycle for the C6 indicator “Diverse seas: status of threatened and declining features".

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    Banning toxic weedkillers could support swifts, starlings and toads in towns and cities, an MP has said ahead of a debate in Parliament.

    The Green Party’s Sian Berry has proposed a public sector ban on the chemicals, which councils can currently use to destroy “undesired plants” in areas which they manage.

    Ms Berry told the PA news agency that the Government had demonstrated “worrying attitudes to nature from the Government in quite a few of their policies”, but added the ban is a move that lawmakers can “genuinely do for nature to make up for that slightly”.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    With what's being called a mini-heatwave looming for the UK, it's not just humans looking forward to warmer weather.

    The warm spell is expected to give a temporary boost to nature as migratory birds arrive from afar and butterflies stretch their wings.

    The British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) says a succession of milder winters and wetter springs are all contributing to change in the natural world.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    Leading economists, former government advisers and ecologists are calling for a key section of the government’s planning bill to be changed because it creates a “licence to kill nature”.

    Sir Partha Dasgupta, professor emeritus of economics at the University of Cambridge, ecology professor Sir John Lawton and Dr Tom Tew, a former chief scientist of Natural England, are among the signatories to a letter to MPs that warns them to ignore government slogans and false rhetoric about nature and wildlife being a block to growth.

    The letter warns that part three of the planning and infrastructure bill, applying mainly to England and Wales, allows developers to pay “cash to trash” wildlife and the environment. They say it allows companies to sidestep environmental laws affecting their project by instead paying into a national nature levy.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    Water companies should no longer be allowed to monitor their own levels of sewage pollution, the industry body has told the BBC exclusively.

    Instead they are proposing a new, third-party monitoring system to build consumer trust.

    The recommendation is part of a submission made to the UK government's independent review into the water sector.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    A wildlife charity is planning to buy a former dairy farm and allow it to be taken over by nature.

    The 44-acre Ebdon Farm near Wick St Lawrence, North Somerset, will be bought by the Avon Wildlife Trust within two years.

    The Esmée Fairbairn Foundation charity has purchased the farm and has given the Trust two years to raise the funds to buy it.

  • UK Nature and Environment @feddit.uk
    GreyShuck @feddit.uk

    A research project is aiming to find out why the population of a rare UK fish is declining.

    The Freshwater Biological Association (FBA) plans to study the spawning grounds of Arctic charr in Windermere to determine the reason behind the fish's falling numbers.

    Although more common in Nordic countries, the Arctic charr is one of the rarest fish in England and its presence in the Lake District contributed to the area becoming a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2017.