Reaping the benefits
Last year, volunteering on our nature reserves increased by an amazing 20%!
Last year, volunteering on our nature reserves increased by an amazing 20%!
Even a small pond can be home to an interesting range of wildlife, including damsel and dragonflies, frogs and newts.
Isn’t wildlife amazing? North Wales is full of nature using its super powers to breathe, eat, drink, swim, fly, hide, save the planet and even go on holiday!
Thanks to volunteers, evidence of one of our rarest mammals was found at a site on Anglesey.
Enjoy our showiest insects – and the flowers they depend on – at Cors Goch Nature Reserve
Have you got a great story about our seas and their wonderful wildlife?
Frogbit looks like a mini water-lily as it floats on the surface of ponds, lakes and still waterways. It offers shelter to tadpoles, fish and dragonfly larve.
Caledonian forest forms an integral part of some of our wildest landscapes - extensive pine forests merge with heathlands, wetlands and montane habitats and create areas large enough for wildcat,…
Our last trips to the shore of the year, we visited our three hub areas again for the group surveys. All three were shores we’ve been to before at various times of the year. Since they were to be…