
£13m scheme boosts rare wildlife but experts warn ‘time running out' for nature
Natural England said the scheme supported the recovery of more than 150 species, many of which were on the brink of national extinction, through creating habitat, captive breeding and translocating wildlife to help it expand into new areas, and research.
The scheme has scored successes including the first wild-hatched red-billed chough chick fledging in Kent for more than 200 years, the reintroduction of black grouse to the North Yorkshire Moors and the return of the large marsh grasshopper to the Norfolk Broads after 85 years, Natural England said.
Tunnels have been installed under a road in Berkshire to allow adders to cross, disused buildings have been made ideal for bat breeding in Sussex and the first example of lady's slipper orchids naturally propagating in the wild has been recorded in Yorkshire.
The scheme invested in 63 different projects from the Lizard Peninsula in Cornwall to Cumbria and Northumberland, working with 78 organisations to create or enhance 2,400 hectares (5,900 acres) of wildlife-rich habitat.
That includes 143 'leaky dams' to support Atlantic salmon, white-clawed crayfish and freshwater pearl mussels, at the same time as reducing flood risk and improving water quality.
And more than 15,000 individual animals and plants were translocated to expand species' territories, as well as captive breeding more than 12,000 individuals including invertebrates, mammals and birds.
Natural England chairman Tony Juniper said the success of the programme showed nature could be restored, but warned there was a need for more projects, more volunteers and more money, particularly from the private sector.
And there needed to be action to improve the environment, such as reducing pollution.
He will tell an event on Wednesday to mark the success of the grant scheme held at Brandon Marsh, Warwickshire, where rare bitterns are staging a comeback: 'A rising number of nature recovery projects, both large and small, are making a huge difference up and down the country.
'The success of this programme is an example of how much we can do when we take a joined up, collaborative approach to restoring the natural world.
'We know we can turn round species decline and improve ecosystems with the right targeted actions, the drive and the funding.
'But time is running out fast – turning round nature's decline needs to be a collective endeavour, so this is not just the preserve of dedicated specialists.
'Nature recovery work needs more projects, more volunteers and more money to flow from all sources, particularly the private sector.
'It will also need to go hand in hand with improved environmental quality, including through reduced pollution.'
The Government is set to publish a revised environmental improvement plan in the autumn to deliver legally binding green targets, after the Office for Environmental Protection watchdog said the previous government was largely off-track to meet the goals.
Mr Juniper said the publication would be a 'key moment', warning there needed to be increased ambition on species recovery, in particular what could be done on some of the wildlife England has lost.
'In the coming years, habitat management and creation alongside species reintroductions could be a real game changer for the health of ecosystems and help us achieve the country's legally binding targets,' he said.
Natural England is also publishing a threatened species recovery actions guide detailing how to support more than 1,000 of England's most threatened species, from the small pearl-bordered fritillary butterfly, corncrake and natterjack toad to tiny lichens.
Richard Benwell, chief executive of the Wildlife and Countryside Link coalition of conservation groups, said: 'Today's results prove species conservation works – but it's still run on a shoestring, with short-term pots of money far from enough to halt nature's decline.
'Government must boost public funding and mandate private investment to multiply this impact tenfold.
'The new environmental improvement plan should also lock in a long-term pipeline of funding for species and the habitats they rely on, combining public and private finance to turn one-off wins into lasting recovery.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
13 hours ago
- The Guardian
Renting has robbed me of precious cat years. So I've turned to pet sitting to fill the void
We talk about housing a lot in Australia. Whether you are a homeowner, an aspiring home owner, a lowly lifelong renter like me or a person who the government is happy to let fall through the cracks, you will hear about it. There's interest rates, negative gearing and the struggle between development and nimbys who not only want to buy the ladder and pull it up behind them, but also make sure no other ladders are made available in the surrounding areas. For my entire life, I have lived in rental properties. As a fully grown adult, I now live in Sydney, where the conditions of rentals, and the prices for those conditions, should be enough to put a boomer off their non-avocado breakfast. You try to live normally, but you know at any moment it could all be yanked out from under you. You could get a random call that your entire share house needs to move out because your landlord's son failed as a DJ in London and needs to come home to sulk. Or you could get excited when the owner has decided to fix all the things you've been asking for for three years, only to discover they are doing it in order to sell. Housing and access to it is a serious problem, but I want to talk about one of the tiny issues that often gets overlooked in the big discussion. I can't have a cat. I am a cis white lesbian, here to say that some stereotypes are true. I love cats. I adore them. It is in my DNA to greet, love, pat and want to have any cat I meet in my home. Occasionally, people on the internet have tried insulting me by calling me a cat lady, and I can't even correct them even though I don't have a cat. They are right. It is who I am intrinsically. My natural setting is being the annoying person at a party already showing you cat photos before you can finish saying ,'Do you have a cat?' I am also the person likely to ask this. I still show people photos of my old cat Tippi, who was with me during my most stable renting years and gave me the best cat years of my life. The last eight years or so have been pet empty, my situation never suitable for a cat, and the idea of adding a special layer of difficulty to the already very difficult process of finding a new rental does not appeal. Luckily, I have a technique to tide me over, so I don't become a crazy catless lady. I have dubbed this concept Intermittent Pets. Those are other people's pets: dogs I see daily at the park who become my friends, the weird cat that haunts the back lane or, better yet, cats, fish, once a tortoise, that I can look after while friends are away, giving me some much-needed pet time. Even a short period of Intermittent Pets is enough to send my PET FULFILLOMETER to the top. In the last handful of years, my girlfriend and I have become a go-to for people who need a couple of queer women to pet-sit while they go on holiday. This is partially because we always live in share houses, and it's nice to have our own space for a bit, but largely it's because I want an Intermittent Pet. We have had a wealth of opportunities to cat-sit in particular, because we know a lot of lesbians who travel for work. I know there are dog people and cat people, a binary I don't believe in because I also love dogs – but cats rule and I'll say it every day. It makes me sad when I hear people say they don't like cats. Usually it's because they had one or two bad experiences with a cat when they were younger. Not to victim-blame, but it was probably your fault. I love cat sitting because I love how different each of their personalities are – their little quirks. You can't just go in hard and rough with a pat and a treat and expect to win it over like a dog. Sure, it's great to have that experience sometimes, but I just love that they have their own boundaries, their own way of doing things and their own way of having you do things for them. You have to attune to each cat, demonstrate that you are safe person in a way their particular sensibilities will respond to. People who don't like cats talk about how they aren't affectionate or loving, and that can't be further from the truth. Some cats are immediately loving, getting into a strange lesbian's lap at the first opportunity. But some need time, and that's OK. There is nothing more satisfying than seeing a cat move gradually from wariness to affection and end up purring in your lap. Someone asked us recently if my girlfriend and I compete over who the cat likes first or the most, but we don't. We are a team (it's usually me though), a couple of carers ready to do whatever it takes to look after the cat and win it over before its owners return. It's not the same as having a permanent cat, but it fills, for a time, the gaping void. Rebecca Shaw is a writer based in Sydney


North Wales Chronicle
15 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
More than one in four students who start T-level courses do not complete them
About 16,081 students began two-year T-level courses in 2023, but just 11,724 completed their course and were assessed, according to provisional data from the Department for Education (DfE). Nearly three out of four (73%) completed the technical qualifications, which is up on last year when 71% finished their courses, the figures suggest. Students in England have received their T-level results in the fourth year that the qualification has been awarded. Overall, 11,909 students in England were awarded results on Thursday for the Government's technical qualification, which was introduced to be broadly equivalent to three A-levels. Across all 18 T-level subjects, 91.4% of students achieved at least a pass. The DfE said learners can elect to complete the T-level course over two or more academic years. Skills minister Baroness Jacqui Smith of Malvern suggested there is still work the Government can do in its rollout of the qualification. She told the PA news agency: 'There are higher pass rates at T-levels, and there are fewer students who aren't getting through to the end. 'But this is still a relatively new subject where teachers are new to it, where the curriculum is relatively new, and where students are finding their way through it. 'So although there's enormous success for students who take T-levels, and it's being increasingly recognised as a gold standard technical education, there's still work that we can do and will do to deliver the professional development for teachers, for example. 'To make sure that the assessment is right, rigorous but manageable for T-levels, and of course to make sure that the thing that T-level students always tell me they really enjoy about their T-levels – the industry placements – are there and available for them to complete.' The number of T-level entries in England has increased by 61.4% on last year, while the number of A-level entries has fallen by 0.5% compared to 2024. Sir Ian Bauckham, chief regulator of Ofqual, England's exams regulator, said there are 'some significant changes' taking place in the 18-year-old cohort this year. He told PA: 'T-levels are intended to be a high-quality, rigorous, full-time level-three course for students to prepare them directly for a particular occupational field. 'The extent to which they draw from people who might have done A-levels, or might have done other vocational and technical qualifications, is very hard to demonstrate because we don't know what people would have done had T-levels not existed.' Sir Ian added: 'I'm confident that T-level entries will continue to rise in the years ahead. 'Clearly when students make one choice over another then the shape of the cohort that they're not choosing – so in this case the shape of the A-level cohort – will be affected.' More than 250,000 results were also issued to students who took level 3 vocational and technical qualifications (VTQs) this year, which include BTecs.


South Wales Guardian
15 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
More than one in four students who start T-level courses do not complete them
About 16,081 students began two-year T-level courses in 2023, but just 11,724 completed their course and were assessed, according to provisional data from the Department for Education (DfE). Nearly three out of four (73%) completed the technical qualifications, which is up on last year when 71% finished their courses, the figures suggest. Students in England have received their T-level results in the fourth year that the qualification has been awarded. Overall, 11,909 students in England were awarded results on Thursday for the Government's technical qualification, which was introduced to be broadly equivalent to three A-levels. Across all 18 T-level subjects, 91.4% of students achieved at least a pass. The DfE said learners can elect to complete the T-level course over two or more academic years. Skills minister Baroness Jacqui Smith of Malvern suggested there is still work the Government can do in its rollout of the qualification. She told the PA news agency: 'There are higher pass rates at T-levels, and there are fewer students who aren't getting through to the end. 'But this is still a relatively new subject where teachers are new to it, where the curriculum is relatively new, and where students are finding their way through it. 'So although there's enormous success for students who take T-levels, and it's being increasingly recognised as a gold standard technical education, there's still work that we can do and will do to deliver the professional development for teachers, for example. 'To make sure that the assessment is right, rigorous but manageable for T-levels, and of course to make sure that the thing that T-level students always tell me they really enjoy about their T-levels – the industry placements – are there and available for them to complete.' The number of T-level entries in England has increased by 61.4% on last year, while the number of A-level entries has fallen by 0.5% compared to 2024. Sir Ian Bauckham, chief regulator of Ofqual, England's exams regulator, said there are 'some significant changes' taking place in the 18-year-old cohort this year. He told PA: 'T-levels are intended to be a high-quality, rigorous, full-time level-three course for students to prepare them directly for a particular occupational field. 'The extent to which they draw from people who might have done A-levels, or might have done other vocational and technical qualifications, is very hard to demonstrate because we don't know what people would have done had T-levels not existed.' Sir Ian added: 'I'm confident that T-level entries will continue to rise in the years ahead. 'Clearly when students make one choice over another then the shape of the cohort that they're not choosing – so in this case the shape of the A-level cohort – will be affected.' More than 250,000 results were also issued to students who took level 3 vocational and technical qualifications (VTQs) this year, which include BTecs.