National Marine Week Showcase - Meet Ellyn
For this year's National Marine Week, we are celebrating the work of our young marine conservationists at The Wildlife Trust of South & West Wales!
For this year's National Marine Week, we are celebrating the work of our young marine conservationists at The Wildlife Trust of South & West Wales!
For this year's National Marine Week, we are celebrating the work of our young marine conservationists at The Wildlife Trust of South & West Wales!
For this year's National Marine Week, we are celebrating the work of our young marine conservationists at The Wildlife Trust of South & West Wales!
Learn a tradition with its roots in the Iron Age and build your own mini dry stone wall to attract wildlife.
Edible periwinkles are a common sight when rockpooling and can be found in huge numbers on the shore.
Stone curlews are unusual waders with large yellow eyes - perfect for hunting beetles at night.
The bright green ring-necked parakeet is an escapee and our only naturalised parrot; its success is likely due to warmer winters.
Our two-minute survey can score your garden and offer ideas to make it even better for wildlife, but why is this so important?
The nodding, blue bells of the harebell are a summer delight of grasslands, sand dunes, hedgerows and cliffs. They are attractive to all kinds of insects, too.
This charming little warbler is an increasingly common sight in autumn, when migrants pass through the UK.