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'Once-in-a-lifetime' humpback whale sighting in Bridlington
www.bbc.co.uk 'Once-in-a-lifetime' humpback whale sighting in Bridlington

An off-duty fisherman enjoying a boat trip with his wife spots a humpback whale feeding on eels.

'Once-in-a-lifetime' humpback whale sighting in Bridlington

An off-duty fisherman enjoying a boat trip with his wife spotted a humpback whale feeding on eels.

Peter and Becky Sanderson sailed from Bridlington harbour to Flamborough South Landing on Tuesday evening and were slowly making their way home when they spotted the whale.

The Bridlington couple, who both love whales, had booked an upcoming humpback whale-spotting tour in Iceland but Mr Sanderson joked they might now cancel it.

He said the encounter, which lasted about half an hour, was a "really special" experience and "might be a once-in-a-lifetime thing".

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Barton farm flying high as record endangered lapwings breed
www.bbc.co.uk Barton farm flying high as record endangered lapwings breed

More pairs of the red-listed Lapwings have bred at the farm and successfully fledged nine chicks.

Barton farm flying high as record endangered lapwings breed

A farm is celebrating a record number of breeding pairs of lapwings, a bird red-listed as being of conservation concern in the UK.

The birds first began nesting at Lark Rise, a 400-acre arable farm, near Barton and Comberton in Cambridgeshire in 2018.

The farm is managed by the Countryside Regeneration Trust (CRT), a Cambridgeshire-based national charity promoting nature-friendly farming.

It said five breeding pairs arrived at Lark Hill this year, which was two more than 2023, and they managed to successfully fledge nine chicks.

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Puffins, catfish and sea squirts: how to spot wildlife on the British coast
www.theguardian.com Puffins, catfish and sea squirts: how to spot wildlife on the British coast

The 10,000 miles of coastline host a stunning variety of creatures, so put on a diving mask or just a pair of wellies and go on the hunt

Puffins, catfish and sea squirts: how to spot wildlife on the British coast

If you go down to the sea today, there’s a good chance you will find something you’ve never seen before. With more than 10,000 miles of coastline and a rich mix of habitats, the Great British seaside is the perfect place for wildlife encounters. Whether you fancy a spot of beachcombing, rock pooling, bird watching or fish following, there’s plenty to keep you busy. With a few simple pointers on where and how to look, there are hundreds of coastal species to find. Grab a pair of wellies or a wetsuit and dive mask and the British coast is all yours to explore.

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No evidence that England’s new ‘biodiversity boost’ planning policy will help birds or butterflies
www.cam.ac.uk No evidence that England’s new ‘biodiversity boost’ planning policy will help birds or butterflies

A new legal requirement for developers to demonstrate a biodiversity boost in planning applications could make a more meaningful impact on nature recovery if

No evidence that England’s new ‘biodiversity boost’ planning policy will help birds or butterflies

A new legal requirement for developers to demonstrate a biodiversity boost in planning applications could make a more meaningful impact on nature recovery if improvements are made to the way nature’s value is calculated, say researchers at the University of Cambridge.

From 2024, the UK’s Environment Act requires planning applications to demonstrate an overall biodiversity net gain of at least 10% as calculated using a new statutory biodiversity metric.

The researchers trialled the metric by using it to calculate the biodiversity value of 24 sites across England. These sites have all been monitored over the long-term, allowing the team to compare biodiversity species data with results from the metric.

Plant biodiversity at the sites matched values produced using the metric, but bird and butterfly biodiversity did not.

This means there’s no evidence that a 10% net biodiversity gain calculated using the statutory biodiversity metric will translate into real-life gains for birds and butterflies, without additional conservation management.

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Natural Resources Wales / Five-year project helps protect threatened landscapes and wildlife

The Sands of LIFE project, funded by the EU and led by Natural Resources Wales (NRW), is ending after five years of recreating natural movement in dunes and revitalising habitats housing some of the country’s rarest wildlife.

Work has taken place at sites including Tywyn Aberffraw, Newborough, Morfa Harlech, Morfa Dyffryn, Laugharne-Pendine Burrows, Whiteford Burrows, Pembrey Coast, Kenfig Burrows and Merthyr Mawr Warren.

A total of 350 ha of works have taken place including habitat restoration, bare sand creation and new grazing areas – equating to 490 football pitches.

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River Wye needs ‘protection zone’, say Greens and Fearnley-Whittingstall
www.theguardian.com River Wye needs ‘protection zone’, say Greens and Fearnley-Whittingstall

North Herefordshire candidate and chef also call for water industry overhaul and more support for farmers

River Wye needs ‘protection zone’, say Greens and Fearnley-Whittingstall

The Green party and the celebrity chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall are calling for a “protection zone” to be placed around one of the UK’s most beautiful but threatened rivers and have demanded “drastic” nationwide changes to the water industry’s management and regulation.

At a wild-swimming event on the River Wye on Wednesday, Fearnley-Whittingstall and the Green party’s candidate for North Herefordshire, Ellie Chowns, both took dips, but only after measuring the level of pollution in the water.

Fearnley-Whittingstall, who is a Green party member, said: “I love swimming in rivers and the sea. It makes me angry we have to check that it’s safe before we get in.”

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Build a hedgehog highway! 33 ways to welcome more wildlife into your garden
www.theguardian.com Build a hedgehog highway! 33 ways to welcome more wildlife into your garden

Whatever your outside space – garden, balcony or window box – you can turn it into a haven for nature with a pint-sized pond and a slowworm sunbed

Build a hedgehog highway! 33 ways to welcome more wildlife into your garden

It is easy to feel hopeless about the future of British wildlife. The 2023 State of Nature report found that one in six species are at risk of extinction, with the groups most under threat including plants, birds, amphibians and reptiles, fungi and land mammals. But many of us can do something simple to help: gardening.

“There are 23m gardens in Britain, so we can make a real difference,” says Rob Stoneman from the Wildlife Trusts. Gardens cover a bigger area than all the UK’s nature reserves combined, he says. “If you haven’t got a garden, perhaps you could have a window box, or get involved in a community garden, or apply for an allotment.”

Adrian Thomas from the RSPB says: “Twenty years ago, there was a sense that gardens contained bog-standard, unimportant wildlife. Research has now shown that gardens are some of our richest habitats. Villages often have more birdlife than the surrounding countryside.” He cites Jennifer Owen, who had a modest-sized suburban garden in Leicester. Over a 30-year period from 1971, she recorded 2,673 species of wildlife in her garden, including seven new to Britain and four new to science.

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National Heathland Conference - 10th to 12th September
nationalheathlandconference.org.uk Home - National Heathland Conference

National Heathland Conference, 10th to 12th September, 2024 at Springfield Country Hotel in Dorset.

10th to 12th September, 2024 at the Springfield Country Hotel, Wareham in Dorset

Booking is open!

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‘Give nature space and it will come back’: rewilding returns endangered species to UK’s south coast
www.theguardian.com ‘Give nature space and it will come back’: rewilding returns endangered species to UK’s south coast

Walking a 100-mile stretch of coastline reveals how a pioneering project is transforming the seascape, rivers and land

‘Give nature space and it will come back’: rewilding returns endangered species to UK’s south coast

On a blustery morning in May on Shoreham-by-Sea’s west beach, Eric Smith and George Short are pointing out treasures the waves have left on the tideline. Cuttlefish bones and balls of whelk eggs, they say, are evidence of recovering marine habitats.

“Just give nature a bit of space and it will come back” says Smith, 76, a former lorry driver by trade, freediver by choice. He first started diving in Sussex coastal waters at the age of 11, and still recalls the underwater “garden of Eden” of his childhood, a kelp forest teeming with bream, lobsters and cuttlefish that stretched 40km between Shoreham and Selsey Bill. It vanished after years of intensive trawling, a destructive form of fishing involving dragging heavy nets along the seabed.

For decades, Smith was a lone voice in his community, battling to stop trawlers further destroying the seabed that hosted the kelp forest, a nursery and spawning ground for fish and other marine life and one of the country’s most biodiverse ecosystems.

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Politicians ‘awol’ on the environment despite 60,000 strong protest, charity says

POLITICIANS have gone “awol” on the environment despite four in five voters expressing concern about the climate and the natural world, conservationists warned today.

New polling for conservation charity WWF shows that while 80 per cent say they care about issues relating to climate, nature and the environment, only 45 per cent believe that politicians share their level of concern.

They face increasing pressure to do more on the environment after tens of thousands of people marched through London at the weekend.

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RSPB NI: Rathlin Island Revival – Three male Corncrakes heard calling on the island
www.newsletter.co.uk RSPB NI: Rathlin Island Revival – Three male Corncrakes heard calling on the island

RSPB NI are thrilled to announce that three calling Corncrakes have returned to Rathlin Island for the breeding season this year.

RSPB NI: Rathlin Island Revival – Three male Corncrakes heard calling on the island

RSPB NI are thrilled to announce that three calling Corncrakes have returned to Rathlin Island for the breeding season this year.

They were first heard calling on the island this year in April by Liam McFaul, RSPB NI’s Rathlin Island reserve warden.Once widespread across Northern Ireland, changes to agricultural practices have seen Corncrake suffer a decline in numbers since the 1980s.

However, thanks to conservation efforts from RSPB NI, in partnership with volunteers and landowners, their distinctive “crex-crex” call has been heard once again on Rathlin Island.

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Your Voice, Your Vote: 'Bring back our lost wildlife'
www.bbc.com Your Voice, Your Vote: 'Bring back our lost wildlife'

Conservation groups and voters have their say on the issues which matter to them in the forthcoming election.

Your Voice, Your Vote: 'Bring back our lost wildlife'

Whether it is sewage pollution or carbon emissions the next government will play a crucial role in shaping the country's environmental direction.

Not that you'd know it as so far there's been little talk of climate change, according to some voters, while species decline is another pressing issue.

The Lancashire Wildlife Trust has also been clear on what it wants the next government to do in the north west of England - to take environmental issues "seriously".

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Drone deployed to spot signs of elm disease
www.brightonandhovenews.org Drone deployed to spot signs of elm disease

A drone is being deployed to spot signs of elm disease across Brighton and Hove, home of Britain’s biggest collection

Drone deployed to spot signs of elm disease

A drone is being deployed to spot signs of elm disease across Brighton and Hove, home of Britain’s biggest collection of the threatened species.

The new technology has given the arboriculture team at Brighton and Hove City Council another way to look out for the early signs of disease.

Over the past 60 years or so, elm disease – also known as Dutch elm disease – has led to the destruction of thousands of the trees across the country.

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Tees Valley Nature Conference discusses environment recovery
www.darlingtonandstocktontimes.co.uk 'Too much tidiness isn’t good for nature,' environment conference told

"Too much tidiness isn’t good for nature," a major conference heard, as experts gathered to discuss environmental recovery.

"Too much tidiness isn’t good for nature," a major conference heard, as experts gathered to discuss environmental recovery.

Delegates at last Friday's Tees Valley Nature Conference heard that while the first environmental strategy had sat on a shelf since 1989, the latest Local Nature Recovery Strategies (LNRSs) were set in law and had the finances to succeed.

Hosted by Tees Valley Nature Partnership (TVNP) and Your Tees Catchment Partnership at Teesside University, the conference, entitled Uniting for Nature’s Recovery, attracted specialists from around the country.

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World-famous Isle of May puffins in good health
www.eastlothiancourier.com Surge in puffin numbers on Isle of May

The Isle of May has seen its puffins numbers increase by around a third since 2017.

The Isle of May has seen its puffins numbers increase by around a third since 2017.

Home to one of the UK’s largest colonies, the habitat has been monitored by NatureScot and the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH), released their findings last week.

Based on their all-island count this summer, scientists estimate there are about 52,000 occupied puffin burrows, compared to 39,000 in the last survey in 2017, showing a 33 per cent increase.

However scientists and field workers on the island remain concerned about the ongoing impact of food supplies and climate change on populations.

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Signs of beavers living by Dorset river confirmed by wildlife trust
www.independent.co.uk Signs of beavers living by Dorset river confirmed by wildlife trust

The presence of the dam-making animals were confirmed after a recently planted tree was felled.

Signs of beavers living by Dorset river confirmed by wildlife trust

Beavers have been found to be living on the River Stour in Dorset in the latest sign of a comeback by the dam-making mammal.

Dorset Wildlife Trust has confirmed that a recently planted tree had been felled by a beaver although it was unable to determine how many were living in the area.

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Eastern Red-rumped Swallow set to be added to British list
www.birdguides.com Eastern Red-rumped Swallow set to be added to British list

Eastern Red-rumped Swallow, which has occurred twice in Britain, is set to become a new addition to the British list, following taxonomic changes confirmed by the IOC. In the upcoming updates to version 14.2 of the World Bird List, which are rumoured to included other significant changes from a Brit...

Eastern Red-rumped Swallow set to be added to British list

Eastern Red-rumped Swallow, which has occurred twice in Britain, is set to become a new addition to the British list, following taxonomic changes confirmed by the International Ornithological Committee (IOC).

In the upcoming updates to version 14.2 of the IOC's World Bird List, which are rumoured to included some significant changes from a British-listing perspective, the Red-rumped Swallow complex has been split.

The nominate form, Cecropis daurica daurica, which is found from southern Siberia to the Amur River, northern Mongolia, western China and Transbaikalia, will become Eastern Red-rumped Swallow, with European Red-rumped (C d rufula) and African Red-rumped Swallows (C d melanocrissus) to be split and treated as full species in their own right.

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Big Butterfly Count - Friday 12th July 2024 until Sunday 4th August

The Big Butterfly Count is a UK-wide survey aimed at helping us assess the health of our environment simply by counting the amount and type of butterflies (and some day-flying moths) we see.

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Devon farm builds three osprey nests in breeding bid
www.bbc.co.uk Devon farm builds three osprey nests in breeding bid

A farm installs three osprey nests, on poles 56ft (17m) high, in a bid to attract ospreys to breed.

Devon farm builds three osprey nests in breeding bid

A farm has installed three osprey nests, on telegraph poles 56ft (17m) high, in a bid to attract the rare birds to breed.

The platforms have been built on land at Warleigh Barton, Plymouth.

Elsa Kent, who set up the Tamar and Tavy Osprey Project, said they had been sighted at Warleigh for about 40 years, but had never bred.

Her mother, Katherine Kent, said the "huge nests" were an equivalent of a "bed and breakfast" for ospreys. Elsa Kent

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Campaign week aims to tackle falling swift numbers
www.bbc.co.uk Campaign week aims to tackle falling swift numbers

Swifts fly to the UK to mate, but a wildlife trust says their nesting spaces are being blocked up.

Campaign week aims to tackle falling swift numbers

A campaign week is taking place in a bid to help halt the decline of swifts.

The migratory bird is a summer visitor to the UK after wintering 3,400 miles south in Africa.

The birds mate in the UK, but due to their nests in the eaves of buildings being blocked, the RSPB said numbers were in decline.

Derbyshire Wildlife Trust is participating in a national awareness week, from Saturday until Sunday 7 July, to showcase the birds and their plight.

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A bee orchid spotted in my front garden
  • They are extraordinary aren't they? Really lucky to have them in your garden.

  • See the top 4 locations in England with the most snakes
  • I'd say they probably were adders if you caught them basking on the path. In general grass snakes are more common, but they typically get out of the way at the slightest disturbance, so all you usually see of them is their tails vanishing in to the undergrowth. Adders aren't as quick off the mark, so are more often seen on paths. They prefer heathland and more open, sunny spots, where grass snakes go for longer grassy areas and often are near water.

    That is assuming that it was actually a snake. Slow worms are often mistaken for snakes and will also spend time basking on tracks. They are usually much lighter in colour and have a smooth pale, metallic bronze look.

    Adders are more obviously scaled and are a deeper grey or brown colour with a very distinctive dark zigzag pattern on their backs.

    They almost certainly won't have been smooth snakes or anything else though.

  • See the top 4 locations in England with the most snakes
  • Hmm - that's Yahoo for you. I try to avoid it as mush as possible. I couldn't find the same piece elsewhere at the time, but a month on this looks like the same article..

  • UK Nature and Environment Summer banner competition - voting thread
  • After a tense 3-way tie, a tie-breaking roll of the die resulted in this atmospheric woodland shot by YungOnions becoming the winner and our new summer banner.

  • What is thing thats digging a hole in my lawn? It happens overnight .
  • As /u/Steve@startrek.website suggests, that certainly looks like sand that has been washed out by water around the hole, so I don't know whether that's relevant.

    Either way, the hole itself doesn't look like a badger snuffle hole or latrine, so I'd say fox is more likely.

  • Will AI fully replace human friendship/companionship someday?
  • At the point where you and the AI can see someone straightening their tie in a certain way and you and the AI can exchange a single wordless glance and you both burst out laughing 'cos it was just like that thing that you both saw 6 months ago and found hilarious then - then maybe.

    Not before.

  • UK Nature and Environment summer banner competition - submissions request
  • If you have some late entries and can get them over to me before midnight, I will delay putting up the voting thread till then!

  • Mondays can be rough. What made you happy last week?
  • A few things off the top of my head:

    • I made a particularly tasty shakshuka over the weekend.
    • I saw a stoat leading her kits nose to tail, so that they looked like a single, bounding, furry snake as they crossed the track a few days back. I have only seen stoats doing that twice before in my life.
    • in Forge of Empires, which I have recently started playing, my defending PvP army successfully defeated a challenger: the first time that has happened, and it left me feeling ridiculously happy.
    • Albert Finney and Sean Connery' interaction in the 1974 version of Murder on the Orient Express
    • My partner's pleasure at completing a 1940s style knitted top. It has turned out extremely well.
  • Thousands of trees 'killed by cigarette butt fire'
  • I don't think that Smokey the Bear featured in PSAs for this in the UK.

    Rupert the Bear, possibly, but not Smokey.

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