A walk on the wild side in lockdown Lanark
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…luckily due to the current restrictions, nobody had any real reason to use it anytime soon, so we let her and her mate use the safety of the van to…
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…luckily due to the current restrictions, nobody had any real reason to use it anytime soon, so we let her and her mate use the safety of the van to…
…times larger than its land area. With such a large marine area under our control, how we use and manage Scotland’s seas is critical to efforts to address climate change….
…it is restored and to prevent further damage through extraction and horticultural use. Perhaps even more of a concern is the lack of understanding that nature-based solutions need to go…
…boardwalks) species/habitat protection (such as control of natural regeneration on peat bogs, cutting and raking of wildflower meadows, control of non-native invasive species) surveys and monitoring (including grazing assessments, deer…
…the UK’s peatlands as a huge carbon store locking up over 3 billion tonnes in the peat. Peatlands are also found at the source of around 70% of the UK’s…
…level on the reserve which will in turn protect the vegetation on the rare peat bog habitat and prevent the release of the carbon stored in the peat. Funding from…
…tiny house in Nairn, I would escape the sadness and walk and walk on East Beach; the wide, wide, skies; the views across the Firth to the Black Isle; occasionally…
On the day the Scottish Government’s consultation on the future of Scotland’s soils closes (Monday 21 September), the Scottish Wildlife Trust (SWT) is warning that climate change could wreak havoc…