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GreyShuck
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www.bbc.com Works begin to restore ecosystem of St Albans rare chalk stream

A project starts to rejuvenate the biodiversity and wildlife in a stretch of river.

Works begin to restore ecosystem of St Albans rare chalk stream

Works have begun on a 2.5km (1.5 miles) stretch of river to restore its ecosystem back to its original state.

A revitalising programme has started on the River Ver, which is a rare chalk stream and flows through St Albans, Hertfordshire, which will develop its surrounding environments and create new wetlands for wildlife and biodiversity.

St Albans City and District Council has been working on the project in partnership with the Environment Agency and Affinity Water.

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www.bbc.com Birth of grey seal pup at Blakeney Point caught on camera

The camera live-streams from the heart of England’s largest grey seal colony.

Birth of grey seal pup at Blakeney Point caught on camera

A solar-powered wildlife camera has captured the moment a grey seal pup was born.

The birth was live-streamed from Blakeney Point in Norfolk, which is home to the UK's largest grey seal colony.

Tracey Sizeland, area ranger for the National Trust said the camera was set up to "enable people to enjoy this amazing wildlife spectacle without causing disturbance to the seals".

Early indications are that record numbers of seal pups will be born on Blakeney Point this winter.

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www.bbc.com No further signs of mouse in St Agnes - wildlife trust

The Isles of Scilly Wildlife Trust says there have been no further signs of a mouse in St Agnes.

No further signs of mouse in St Agnes - wildlife trust

Wildlife experts have said there have been no further signs of a mouse in one of the Isles of Scilly.

The Isles of Scilly Wildlife Trust said it had conducted an "intensive incursion response" with the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) since 31 October, when probable signs of a mouse had been found on St Agnes.

Mice and rats were previously eradicated from the island as part of measures to protect its population of storm petrels as they would be considered likely to eat the birds' eggs, the RSPB said.

The trust said it would increase monitoring and reduce its use of rodenticide until the new year when it planned to stop the operation.

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scottishwildlifetrust.org.uk Scottish Wildlife Trust warns of urgent need for action

Scotland’s leading conservation charity, the Scottish Wildlife Trust, has welcomed the Scottish Government’s new Biodiversity Strategy and Delivery Plans. However, they have also warned that despite some good ambitions, the …

Scottish Wildlife Trust warns of urgent need for action

Scotland’s leading conservation charity, the Scottish Wildlife Trust, has welcomed the Scottish Government’s new Biodiversity Strategy and Delivery Plans. However, they have also warned that despite some good ambitions, the Government must go further to meet its own stated targets, calling for more action and funding to support work on the ground by local government, charities and communities.

Recent collaborative work that Edinburgh University and the Scottish Wildlife Trust carried out showed that there is real urgency required in tackling the biodiversity crisis and that acting early enhances resilience, whereas failure to invest in nature now will only cost us more in the long run. Simply put: by acting now for nature, we minimise long-term costs and keep our options open for future decisions.

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www.theguardian.com Defra cuts pose ‘existential threat’ to England’s most beautiful areas

Exclusive: National landscapes’ chiefs say environment secretary has given no budget assurances and they are to expect cuts

Defra cuts pose ‘existential threat’ to England’s most beautiful areas

Proposed cuts to England’s most beautiful landscapes pose an “existential threat”, the managers of the National Landscapes Association have warned.

These 46 regions, including the Chilterns, the Cotswolds, the Wye Valley and the north Pennines, used to be known as areas of outstanding natural beauty but were renamed this year as “national landscapes”. They cover 15% of England, including 20% of the coastline.

However, those who run the parks have said the environment secretary, Steve Reed, has given no assurances about the budget for the national landscapes. The day-to-day spending budget of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) will be cut by 2% in the financial year 2025-26. It is understood this will be spread across departments, and the national landscapes teams have been told to expect a 12% cut.

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www.theguardian.com Welsh government urged to safeguard Celtic rainforests

Conservation groups’ report warns remaining temperate rainforest sites and ‘vital habitats’ are in poor condition

Welsh government urged to safeguard Celtic rainforests

They are rich, damp, dappled places of twisted branches, vivid green mosses and lichens, important homes for rare birds, bats and insects, and steeped in myths and tales.

But a report from a group of conservation organisations has concluded that the remaining pockets of temperate, or Celtic, rainforests of Wales are in a parlous condition and is calling for urgent action from the Welsh government.

The newly created Alliance for Wales’ Rainforests (AWR) says only about one in five of the 68 sites it has surveyed are in good condition and none could be rated as in very good condition. Invasive species such as rhododendron and ivy are present at 70% of the sites, with many of them suffering from insensitive grazing and air pollution.

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www.bbc.com Wildlife trust buys farm in heart of North Cave Wetlands

Dryham Farm sits within North Cave Wetlands, a nature reserve managed by Yorkshire Wildlife Trust.

Wildlife trust buys farm in heart of North Cave Wetlands

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust (YWT) has bought a farm in the heart of one of its nature reserves.

It said the purchase of Dryham Farm, within North Cave Wetlands near Hull, was a "once in a lifetime opportunity to secure an incredible space". The fee was not disclosed.

Managers said it would help them plan for the future while minimising disruption to wildlife.

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butterfly-conservation.org Butterfly partnership sets out to save rare species in Wales

Butterfly Conservation has launched a dedicated programme to save one of Wales’s most endangered species.The charity is training dozens of people, leading survey expeditions and working with landowners to improve habitat for the stunning Marsh Fritillary.The charity has been awarded £174,000 from th...

Butterfly partnership sets out to save rare species in Wales

Butterfly Conservation has launched a dedicated programme to save one of Wales’s most endangered species.

The charity is training dozens of people, leading survey expeditions and working with landowners to improve habitat for the stunning Marsh Fritillary.

The charity has been awarded £174,000 from the Welsh Government's Nature Networks Fund (round three) to create a Wales Marsh Fritillary Recovery Partnership, and has employed a dedicated member of staff, John Hitchens, as its Wales Marsh Fritillary Recovery Project Officer.

The partnership will be made up of environmental charities, statutory bodies, volunteers, landowners and managers who can share their knowledge and work together to help the vulnerable species.

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www.theguardian.com Record number of English bathing sites classified as having poor water quality

River water quality distinctly worse than that of coastal bathing sites, results from tests for harmful bacteria found

Record number of English bathing sites classified as having poor water quality

Water quality has been designated as poor in a record number of bathing areas this year after 16 rivers were included in summer testing for harmful bacteria, figures reveal.

The push to clean up England’s rivers has led to an increase in demand for bathing water status at river locations across the country. Rivers suffer from water company sewage pollution and agricultural pollution, and the results show river water quality is distinctly worse than that of coastal bathing sites. The results come after sewage pollution into rivers by water companies reached record levels last year.

This year, 16 river areas were designated as bathing water sites out 27 new areas, which meant they were tested for harmful bacteria, E coli and intestinal enterococci.

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Bumblebee population increases 116 times over in 'remarkable' Scotland rewilding project
  • There are some details here and here. I'd expect that reaching out the project team themselves would be the next step. I'd expect that they will have a management plan and project summary of some kind that they could share at the very least.

  • How AI could save the UK’s endangered red squirrels

    The UK’s endangered red squirrel population could have an unlikely savior – an AI detection program.

    Genysys Engine, an AI research company in Northern Ireland, has developed a program which identifies red and gray squirrels with 97 percent accuracy.

    Red squirrels are native to the UK and have been there for thousands of years, whereas their gray counterparts were brought to the country from the US in the 19th century. Both species compete for the same resources and spread diseases, including squirrel pox, which is fatal for the reds but not grays, and so the red population has dramatically dropped.

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    www.timeout.com Britain’s Biggest Bird of Prey: More Sea Eagles Are Being Released in the South of England

    Sea eagles are gradually making a comeback in the south of England after disappearing for over 200 years.

    White-tailed eagles (also known as sea eagles), disappeared from England’s skies more than 200 years ago but have slowly been making a return to the south of the country since 2019. A pair of the birds successfully bred for the first time last year and now there are plans to reintroduce even more.

    The breed has an enormous wingspan of 2.5 metres (8.2ft), making it the UK’s largest bird of prey. A reintroduction project by Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation and Forestry England has been going from strength to strength and now there are plans to release up to 20 young eagles in Exmoor National Park.

    White-tails used to breed in Exmoor before going extinct in from England in 1780. Experts say that Exmoor has proved to be particular hotspot for the birds and over the past few years they have been spotted visiting the area once again.

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    www.bbc.com Farming: U-turn on Welsh tree rule after angry backlash

    Changes to the scheme, which included 10% tree cover on all Welsh farms, have been made.

    Farming: U-turn on Welsh tree rule after angry backlash

    Plans to require Welsh farmers to have trees on 10% of their land in order to qualify for government funding have been dropped after widespread protests.

    The requirement was part of planned changes to Welsh farming subsidies through the Sustainable Farming Scheme (SFS), which is to be introduced in 2026.

    Now it is set to be replaced by "a tree planting and hedgerow creation plan", which farmers would need to start to make progress on with a view to delivering this by 2030.

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    Bumblebee population increases 116 times over in 'remarkable' Scotland rewilding project

    The bumblebee population has made an impressive comeback in a developed area by increasing to 116 times what it was two years ago thanks to a nature restoration group.

    Rewilding Denmarkfield, a 90-acre project based just north of Perth, has been working to restore nature to green spaces in an increasingly built up area for the past two years.

    Statistics from the charity show in 2021, when some of the fields managed by the project were still barley monoculture, only 35 bumblebees were counted.

    But by 2023, after just two years of nature restoration work in the same fields, the population increased to 4,056. The diversity of bumblebee also doubled, according to the charity, from five to ten different species.

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    A Natural Resources Wales (NRW) project on the Western Cleddau river in Pembrokeshire is harnessing the power of trees to reduce nutrient pollution and improve water quality.

    Approximately 6,500 trees have been planted along the banks of the river near it’s confluence with the Eastern Cleddau, to soak up excess nutrients from agricultural land run off.

    The corridors of trees, averaging 14metres in width, act as buffer strips between farmland and the river and have been planted on non-productive land. They have been introduced with the full support of the landowner, who was eager to introduce positive environmental change.

    As well as providing benefits to the Special Area of Conservation river, the new trees will provide connection with existing natural woodland on the land, benefiting a range of plant and wildlife species.

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    Oxfordshire group urges government to protect chalk streams

    An Oxfordshire wildlife trust has joined a group of charities in calling for action to protect the UK’s chalk streams.

    The Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust has joined the group of nature charities in urging the government to safeguard these rare habitats in planning reforms.

    Chalk streams are characterised by their clear waters and diverse wildlife, with 85 per cent of the world's chalk streams found in England, including Letcombe Brook and Chalgrove Brook in Oxfordshire.

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    Creating woodlands and wildlife corridors in Cheshire

    Cheshire’s ancient woodlands are a cherished part of the county’s natural heritage, offering not just a haven for wildlife but also a repository of memories for generations of local people.

    These woodlands, some of which have existed since medieval times, provide an enchanting escape into nature and a living connection to the past.

    As we look to the future, there is enormous potential to increase our native tree cover, benefiting wildlife, farming and the wider environment.

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    www.bbc.com Lake District walking routes repaired by volunteers

    Dozens of people take part in Fell Care Day, but icy conditions cancel a summit climb.

    Lake District walking routes repaired by volunteers

    Volunteers have answered a conservation charity's call to help repair areas around walking routes, but icy conditions forced the cancellation of a summit climb.

    Friends of the Lake District’s Fell Care Day had been due to include a trip to the top of the Old Man of Coniston on Friday to restore footpaths.

    Other activities were able to go ahead though, including dry stone walling, renewing a bridleway and cutting back invasive plants.

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    www.bbc.com Dover: Chalk grassland restoration to create habitats

    The project will run until the end of 2026 on land around Dover Castle and Western Heights.

    Dover: Chalk grassland restoration to create habitats

    A large area of chalk grassland in east Kent is to be restored to create habitats for key species.

    The project will cover 20 acres (8 hectares) of land around Dover Castle and the Western Heights aiming to provide suitable homes for choughs, Adonis blue butterflies, early spider orchids and other flora and fauna.

    A mixed-breed livestock herd will be introduced for long-term management through conservation grazing.

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    www.bbc.com Northumberland sand dunes invasive plants to be destroyed

    Plants such as ivy stop the dunes from shifting, but the movement is vital for other species.

    Northumberland sand dunes invasive plants to be destroyed

    Invasive plants are to be removed from sand dunes to protect the coastline.

    The ecological work by Natural England is to be carried out using large machinery on the dunes at Bamburgh, Northumberland, as part of the Life Wader project.

    The invasive species are destroying the dunes by interrupting their natural cycle of movement and crowding out native plants and animals.

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    www.theguardian.com ‘Catastrophic’ marine heatwaves are killing sealife and causing mass disruption to UK fisheries

    Targeted research must be launched urgently to save sea creatures and plant life, oceanography centre warns

    ‘Catastrophic’ marine heatwaves are killing sealife and causing mass disruption to UK fisheries

    Britain is facing a future of increasingly catastrophic marine heatwaves that could destroy shellfish colonies and fisheries and have devastating impacts on communities around the coast of the UK.

    That is the stark conclusion of a new report by the National Oceanography Centre (NOC), based in Southampton, which is pressing for the launch of a targeted research programme as a matter of urgency to investigate how sudden temperature rises in coastal seawater could affect marine habitats and seafood production in the UK.

    Across the planet, marine heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense as rising fossil fuel emissions force up atmospheric temperatures around the globe, causing the sea to warm.

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    Is it a british thing to pass a football to strangers on the street?
  • I'm in my 50s. This is not something that I have ever encountered in the street.

    Perhaps, when walking through a park or similar, when I was in my teens or twenties, some kids might have kicked a ball in my direction a couple of times, with the hope/expectation that I would return it, but that it about as close as I have experienced.

  • Enlightenment
  • Philosophy is the disease for which it should be the cure.

    ― Herbert Feigl, Inquiries and Provocations: Selected Writings 1929–1974

  • Kent: Rare and protected fungus found at nature reserve
  • They are certainly edible and are considered to have a range of health benefits - but the commercially available ones will be farmed or collected elsewhere than in the UK. Even if anyone did feel like foraging for them in the UK - which would be illegal, of course - given how rare they are, there's no way it would be commercially viable.

  • CouLSDon gets cancelled by Facebook’s algorithm police
  • It's Scunthorpe all over again. Have we learnt nothing?

  • Oil and gas are gift of god, Azerbaijan president tells climate summit
  • Aliyev's comments are short-sighted, delusional bollocks but... have you never had a candle as a gift?

  • Why no "elsetime" or "elseone" ?
  • It seems that elsewhen, and a lot of other variations - used to be used, but fell out of fashion. There is some discussion here.

  • Do you decorate for holidays?
  • From Nov 24th, we progressively decorate the house, one item per day, throughout Brumalia - the old Roman/Byzantine winter festival - in preparation for Saturnalia.

    Otherwise, we'll have a pair of candles going for the eight sabbats themselves, regardless of anything else that we do for them, but I don't think that candles alone really count as decorations.

  • Raising a flag
  • Yes, fun idea. No problem with that but... that 'flag' is a sail. They're different things.

  • If you wanted to dial-down our incessant breeding without getting lynched, how would you do it?
  • Improve education for girls worldwide. A very strong link has been established by numerous studies.

  • What's something unique that you carry on you every day?
  • Leaving aside points about driving licence numbers being unique or whatever, it would be the silver pentagram that I made back in the '90s and have worn (or occasionally carry in my wallet etc, when the cord breaks) ever since.

  • What do you do for a living and what does a day in your life look like?
  • Facilities manager for a wildlife and heritage charity. I lead a small team looking after health & safety, compliance and building maintenance and repairs.

    Ninety percent of my time is spent at the keyboard, but since I am peripatetic and move around the properties that I cover, I have a different, and usually beautiful, view out of the window each day of the week. When I am not sat behind a desk, I will be crawling through an attic or have my head down a sewer or something.

    My time is spent arranging contractors for routine servicing or repair projects, reviewing fire risk assessments and dealing with outstanding actions, writing client briefs for renewable energy projects, chasing people to do workplace inspections, advising on risk assessments, updating our compliance tracker, arranging asbestos surveys, ensuring that everyone who needs training has it up to date, proving to utility companies that their meters are wildly inaccurate and need to be replaced, working out why the biomass boiler/sewage treatment plant/water heater/automatic gate/car park machine/phone system/greywater pump/security alarm/whatever isn't working and getting it fixed and so on.

  • It's Tuesday, what made you happy last week?
    • A grass snake seems to have taken up residence under our compost heap. Hopefully it will be a suitable hibernation spot.
    • New seasons of Star Trek: Lower Decks and Shrinking are out.
    • My SO and I went for a good walk in a nearby woodland nature reserve. The autumn colours are really coming though now.
    • I now have some cosy fleece pyjamas. I haven't owned pyjamas for decades, but can see will that they will revolutionise my weekend mornings. I don't know why I didn't get some years ago.
  • What should be in butter?
  • Checking the ones that I usually buy the ingredients are:

    • Butter

    Or, if I go for salted versions:

    • Butter
    • Salt
  • [Weekly thread] It's Wednesday, which movies have you been watching?
  • Recently went to a screening of the 1922 Nosferatu with a live accompanist creating an improvised soundtrack on violin, piano and waterphone - which was not an instrument that I had not encountered before, but evidently features in the score of The Matrix, Aliens and a range of other films. I can certainly see why - it was extremely atmospheric. I had seen Nosferatu a couple of times before - as well as the 1979 Herzog version, and Shadow of the Vampire (2000) - but this definitely added something new.

  • Thousands more badgers to be culled this year
  • Is there any peer reviewed published research that studied if this was effective and the best available option.

    Recently, this study found that although culling does reduce cattle infection in the immediate area, it seems to increase infection in surrounding areas - due to displaced badgers spreading it - which is exactly what everyone opposing the culls predicted way back when they started.

  • Study Shows No Impact of Drone Flights on Scottish Seabird Colonies
  • These are a very different type of drone, but I have worked on a site with a large colony of seabirds that also attracted a lot of recreational drone usage due to historical features on the site. These smaller, hovering drones would very obviously disturb the breeding birds in the short term - we would notice the disturbance before spotting the drone quite often - and there was a good deal of discussion about their growing use and possible consequences. The organisation currently has a ban on drones over their properties for this and various other reasons - but of course it is practically impossible to enforce, since you usually can't find the operator when they not present on site.

    I have not seen any formal study of the effect of drones on seabirds until this though.

  • My kind of tea time
  • My childhood imaginary friend(s) were a flock of flying bunnies of various colours. It is not often that you get to see them represented.

  • Treehouse converted to bat hotel in Worcestershire
  • Woos-ter-shuh, like the sauce.

  • The 42 year old new hire at your job confesses to you that he has had 48 different jobs in his life. What is your opinion on that?
  • By that age, I was into my third long-term job (> 5 years) and had had upwards of 16 short term ones - multiple part time ones at once, or some just for a few weeks or a couple of months here and there between the long-term ones etc.

    48 doesn't seem that unlikely - nor even an indicator that they will not be staying put for any length of time unless your job is a shitty one with a high turnover anyway.