Archive for May, 2010
May 27th, 2010

I thought this mass letter by the RSPB for the new government was worth signing: Sign the letter: (for UK residents)
I’m writing this now to make sure our children have a chance of growing up in a world worth living in.
Today there’s still time to save nature.
If we act now, our children may yet be able to share their world with sparrows and polar bears, eagles and tigers. There’s still a chance that they’ll inherit a world where the engines of life – the air, seas, rivers and forests – are healthy. Where bluebell woods and rainforests won’t be lost forever.
Yes, I accept that recovery from recession has meant spending billions of pounds – one way or another future generations will have to pay for this. The least we can do is to use this money to create a future they’ll thank us for. I want governments to invest in a healthy economy and a healthy environment. As well as protecting jobs, I want them to tackle climate change and to protect our seas, countryside and wildlife.
I’m signing this letter to show that I care deeply about nature and the world we are creating for our children. In years to come I hope they’ll be able to see that their world is a richer one because of the action we took today.
I’m hoping that many thousands of people will join me in signing it.
Together we can be a powerful voice for nature.
Yours in hope.
Birds of Britain, Outdoor activities | Tags: RSPB|
May 19th, 2010

Purple herons are sporadic visitors to the UK, but they’ve gone one step further this year. Exciting news from the RSPB reserve in Dungeness, Kent, is that a pair have built a nest and are apparently sitting on eggs. A 24-hour guard has been established to promote chances of a successful breeding, which would be a historic first for Britain. This southern European heron is expanding its range northward, probably due to climate change, and is expected to become a regular breeder in Britain in the near future, following in the footsteps of its relative, the Little egret.
Hopefully, the presence of this spectacular bird will help the RSPB fight against plans to build an international airport at nearby Lydd.
Birds of Britain, Climate change in the UK, Country accommodation in the UK, Wetland birds of Britain | Tags: climate change and British birds, new bird species in Britain, purple herons in Britain, purple herons in Dungeness|
May 19th, 2010

The RSPB have released a checklist of top tips of how to stop your loving moggy slaughtering the local birdlife ( 27 million birds are killed every year by the 7.2 million cats the British keep as pets). Amusingly entitled “Sylvester and Tweetie Pie can live together” it recommends:
- Put a bell on the cat’s collar – an RSPB study shows that this can reduce predation of birds by 41%. The collar should have a quick release buckle and fitted properly
- Make sure cats are well fed and cared for. This may encourage them to stay close to home and be less likely to wander
- Keep your cats indoors around sunset and sunrise and after bad weather – birds are most vulnerable at these times as its when they are most likely to come out to feed.
- Take your cat indoors if a fledgling is in the garden, until its parents lead it away
- Avoid putting food on the ground for a few weeks where cats are known to catch birds. Use a bird table or higher ground where cats cannot reach it
- Place spiny plants such as holly or an uncomfortable surface around the base of the feeding station to prevent cats sitting underneath it
- Position nest boxes where cats cannot reach them or sit close to them (preventing the parents birds from getting to the box.
The photo is from the Guardian who note on this story “our feline companions are supplementing the £829m we spend on cat food every year with their own avian breakfast, lunch and dinner. Here
Birds of Britain, Outdoor activities | Tags: # Put a bell on the cat’s collar, avian breakfast, How many birds do cats kill?, Keep your cats indoors, our feline companions|
May 17th, 2010
Grey squirrel pie continues to gain in popularity across the country. I enjoyed this comment in the Manchester Evening News, explaining the origin of the debate on what squirrel actually tastes like.
“Country squirrels live on a diet of sweet things like berries, unlike their urban cousins who will eat mostly anything found thrown on the streets. This diet can make their meat taste sweet, and if cooked right can have a taste between duck and lamb (without the greasy fat usually produced by both cooked animals). The squirrel I ate had a sweetish taste although not much meat for a feast! “
Image from Pest controller moves south to feed demand for squirrel pie
Invasive species in Britain, squirrels in Britain | Tags: Grey squirrels in Britain, Non-native species in Britain|
May 15th, 2010

The Guardian has put together a special Travel issue dedicated to camping: find out about Britain’s best tiny campsites which are never crowded, island camping and some remotely located campsites. Read and be inspired to start planning your next camping trip in wild Britain.
Camping in Britain, Nature tourism in the UK | Tags: camping holiday suggestions, camping in very small campsites, camping on British islands, ideas for camping holidays in Britain, remote campsites in Britain|
May 11th, 2010
We’ve been a bit busy recently with stuff and so we haven’t had time to update the site. Here are a few news stories we’ve missed:
Mammals and birds
- Water voles have surprised ecologists by abandoning their herbivorous diet and developing a taste for frogs’ legs. More
- Cranes, with their huge eight-feet wingspan, were once a common sight in wetlands across the country. But in the 1600s, a loss of habitat – coupled with relentless persecution by man – made this charismatic species extinct in Britain.Now they are set to return. More
- One of the rarest mating rituals of any British animal has finally been caught on camera. A BBC natural history film crew has captured what experts believe is the first footage of a male bittern “booming” in daylight in the UK. More
- The tawny owl population in one of the UK’s largest forests is booming as a result of the harsh winter, a Forestry Commission expert said today.There has been a significant increase in the number of voles, which the birds of prey feed on, in Kielder Forest, Northumberland, and experts believe this is linked to the recent cold weather. More
Flora
- Britain’s rarest flower given round-the-clock police protection More
- The english oak, the quintessential native tree which saved a monarch and defines the British landscape, is under grave threat from a little-understood new disease that forestry experts fear is spreading far more rapidly across the country than previously estimated. More
Other stories
- Archives of environmentalist Roger Deakin given to university.Life’s work of pioneering nature writer handed to University of East Anglia, including swimming trunks and fishy manuscript. More
- Garden ponds unwittingly polluted by tap water. Survey of garden ponds finds many have high level of nitrates from tap water that can harm wildlife More
- Rubbish tips, supermarket car parks and motorway verges are to become wildlife reserves, under plans to revolutionise conservation. More
- A moth new to science and found nowhere else in the world has been formally recognised as living in the UK. More
- Over-fishing means UK trawlers have to work 17 times as hard for the same fish catch as 120 years ago, a study shows. Researchers used port records dating from the late 1800s, when mechanised boats were replacing sailing vessels. In the journal Nature Communications, they say this implies “an extraordinary decline” in fish stocks and “profound” ecosystem changes. More
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