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Peatlands: An important carbon store
As our climate increasingly warms, the UK’s peatlands are put under ever greater pressure. Find out how Butterfly Conservation is working alongside volunteers to protect this unique habitat.
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CJ Wildlife – Gardening for Winter Wildlife
December tends to be a busy month for both people and birds, but for differing reasons. We have the excitement of preparing for the Christmas and New Year celebrations, whilst our garden birds will be doing all they can to survive the shorter days and much longer colder nights.
Here are CJ Wildlife’s top tips for helping your garden birds this winter. -
Journey to the Moth Atlas: Producing the first ever atlas of larger moths in Britain, Ireland, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands
275 years of moth recording in one publication.
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Thank you Alex - #YouMadeItHappen
Find out how a group of nature enthusiasts can be developed into a skilled, effective and supportive team of butterfly recorders.
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Limestone’s Living Legacies – Highlights of the past year
One of the things I enjoy most about our Back from the Brink project is its variety. Not just the variety of species that we are working to protect, but also the variety of activities that we get to do in order to achieve these aims. After another busy year it seems like a good time to reflect on some of the highlights over the past 12 months.
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Assessing the State of Nature in the UK
The State of Nature 2019 report has recently been published by a partnership consisting of more than 50 organisations drawn from conservation NGOs, research institutes and UK and national governments working together to provide an up to date assessment of the state of the UK’s wildlife across land and sea.
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Trick-or-Treat? Discover 10 Magical Moths for Halloween.
Trick-or-Treat? Discover 10 Magical Moths for Halloween.
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Introducing Ian
Introducing Ian Middlebrook, Butterfly Monitoring Co-ordinator at Butterfly Conservation.
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Red List complications
The natural variability of insect populations is causes problems for Red List categories
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The science behind the Chequered Skipper re-introduction
Dr Nigel Bourn introduces a new model that could improve monitoring of the Chequered Skipper in Scotland.
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Producing biodiversity indicators from butterfly and moth data
Prof. Tom Brereton and Dr Emily Dennis discuss the value of producing biodiversity indicators from butterfly and moth data
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Science News in brief
Unusual traits have been found in Grayling butterflies in North Wales and a new study looks at how life cycles are affected by environmental factors.
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Dig It – September Tips from the Secret Gardener
Late season nectar for hibernating species and migrating moths
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Responsible Wildlife Photography
Amateur wildlife photographer and Butterfly Conservation’s social media expert Andrew Cooper explains why respecting the environment is so important when you are out trying to capture that perfect picture.
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Hand it to the Hawks
Butterfly magazine editor Liam Creedon reveals how George Orwell, cannibalism, mad kings, theft and cigarettes make Hawk-moths the rock stars of UK mothing.
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Dig It – June Tips from the Secret Gardener
See the Secret Garden makeover. From paving to pollinator pots and bare earth to butterfly blooms.
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The Duke of Burgundy is no gentleman!
Judging on behaviour alone it could be argued that the Duke of Burgundy doesn’t really deserve its aristocratic title. For despite its diminutive size, the Duke is something of a bar-room brawler, prone to outbursts of violence and lacking in the airs and graces its grand name would suggest.
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What Do Hungry Caterpillars Really Eat?
Butterflies and moths lay their eggs where their offspring will have the best chance of survival. This usually means on the leaf of their foodplant, providing a ‘ready meal’ when they hatch. But there are always exceptions to the rule.
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If You Care About Wildlife Use Peat-free Compost
Nick Mann, founder of Habitat Aid, explains why the plants he sells are never grown in peat and why you should go peat-free in your garden.
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Searching for webs of the Glanville Fritillary
The trip across to the Isle of Wight to help monitor the number of webs of the Glanville Fritillary is a real highlight of the year and helps to understand trends in the population size.
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Dig it – April Tips from the Secret Gardener
Discover how to make your garden more moth-friendly by providing night-time nectar.
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Discover the Emperor moth
Naturalist and presenter Nick Baker explains why the Emperor Moth is the true harbinger of spring.
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Are habitat changes driving the decline of the High Brown Fritillary?
The High Brown Fritillary is undoubtedly the UK’s most threatened butterfly. It has declined in distribution by a staggering 96%, disappearing from most of England and Wales.
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Trend and indicators for Scottish moths
A recently completed research project led by Emily Dennis and Tom Brereton of Butterfly Conservation has used Rothamsted Insect Survey (RIS) and National Moth Recording Scheme (NMRS) data to develop trends in the abundance and distribution (occupancy) of Scottish moths.
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The role of moths as nocturnal pollinators
The concept that moths pollinate some plants is not novel, with examples featuring in the writings of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace.
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Are Welsh agri-environment schemes helping butterflies?
The decline in European farmland biodiversity is well documented. The main driver of this decline is also well known: the intensification of agriculture that has taken place in recent decades.
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Dig it – March Tips from the Secret Gardener
Get your peat-free garden started by growing your own plants from seed.
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Meet BC's newest volunteer: 16-year-old Anabel Boakes
In support of the Government's Year of Green Action and our #iwill4nature pledge, Butterfly Conservation are hoping to connect more young people than ever before with wildlife this year, teaching them about butterflies and moths and inspiring them to take part in social action to improve the natural environment.
Meet our newest volunteer: 16-year-old Anabel Boakes from Dorset...
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Small acts can help beleaguered butterflies and moths
A report warning that plummeting insect numbers threatens the collapse of nature is a stark reminder that we must all play our part in trying to slow the assault on the natural world.