The Wildlife Trusts received 18,425 responses to their campaign, one of the highest numbers ever received for a marine issue. Each individual response was emailed to the Marine Management Organisation ...
A new proposal from a group of peers could disarm the most damaging aspect of the Planning & Infrastructure Bill and reduce the risks that it currently poses to the natural world. The Bill, as it ...
The Wildlife Trusts are inviting creative nature lovers across the UK to take part in their winter jumper design competition.
Nationwide’s head office in Swindon has achieved The Wildlife Trusts’ Biodiversity Benchmark, becoming the first bank or ...
As the IUCN World Congress has drawn to a close, Rob Stoneman, Director of Landscape Recovery, reflects on the last week.
Join Rob Stoneman, Director of Landscape Recovery, as he journeys through a history of peatland recovery and restoration in ...
Fangs to spinners, the bodies of the largest British spiders are around 20mm (including the great fox, which I re-discovered ...
Farmers need long-term support and certainty to continue providing sustainable food that helps to restore nature ...
To mark World Food Day, Vicki Hird looks at how the needs of nature and humans can and should be met through changes throughout our food system.
The porbeagle shark is a member of the shark family Lamnidae, making it one of the closest living relatives of the great white shark. Porbeagle sharks are listed as Vulnerable by the IUCN Red List and ...
Flitting about the house in summer, the gangly, brown daddy longlegs is familiar to many of us. They are a valuable food source for many birds. The daddy longlegs is actually a large type of cranefly, ...
The black garden ant is the familiar and abundant small ant that lives in gardens, but also turns up indoors searching for sugary food. In summer, winged adults, or 'flying ants', swarm and mate. The ...