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Recovery of more than 150 species thanks to money from scheme
Recovery of more than 150 species thanks to money from scheme

BBC News

time6 days ago

  • General
  • BBC News

Recovery of more than 150 species thanks to money from scheme

Natural England says a two-year scheme has supported the recovery of more than 150 Species Recovery Programme, which ran from August 2023 to March 2025, awarded £13 million to different nature included helping rare wildlife like water voles, oystercatchers and lady's slipper orchid through creating new habitats or relocation. The chairman of Natural England Tony Jupiter said the success showed it is possible to help threatened species but warned "time is running out fast" to stop declines in wildlife. Natural England, which advises the government on the natural environment, said many of the species that were helped were close to national money went towards research, creating habitat, captive breeding, and moving wildlife to new scheme's successes include the first wild-hatched red-billed chough chick leaving its nest 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 completed projects include building tunnels under a road in Berkshire so adders can cross safely and the first example of rare lady's slipper orchids growing naturally in the wild in well as 143 'leaky dams' made with natural woody materials which lets water through, to help Atlantic salmon and white-clawed crayfish while reducing flood agency claims 15,000 individual animals and plants were translocated to expand species' territories. Natural England chairman Tony Juniper said the programme showed nature could be restored, but added there was a need for more projects, more volunteers and more also said there needed to be action to improve the environment, such as reducing Government is due to publish an amended environmental improvement plan in the autumn with green targets which will be legally binding. Mr Juniper said the publication would be a "key moment", but more would need to be done."In the coming years, habitat management and creation alongside species reintroductions could be a real game changer for the health of ecosystems" he England has also released a threatened species recovery actions guide showing 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.

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