இனங்கள் மீட்பு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stay updated with breaking news from இனங்கள் மீட்பு. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Top News In இனங்கள் மீட்பு Today - Breaking & Trending Today
New BVA President pledges to make sustainability a key priority for the profession bva.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bva.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Green Tiger Beetle. Photo: Dominic Price A CAPTIVE breeding project run in partnership with a Winchester college has successfully bred Green Tiger Beetles, as part of a wider conservation project for rare beetles. Green Tiger Beetles (Cicindela campestris) are large, striking beetles that are easily identified by their iridescent green colouring and characteristic yellow spots. They are relatively widespread in the UK and can be found in the spring and early summer. They are closely related to the Heath Tiger Beetle (Cicindela sylvatica), a species which is now extremely rare in the UK and found in only a handful of places in the south of England. Sadly, Heath Tiger Beetles have experienced a dramatic decline over the last few decades with the loss and degradation of lowland heathland. ....
Saving eggs from airfields is bringing a curlew boom in the east of England Project underway as International Biodiversity Day 2021 (22 May) is marked. From: The project will increase the population of curlew in the area, which has seen a significant decline in its numbers over the past 40 years An innovative Natural England led partnership project that will boost populations of Eurasian curlew is underway in the East of England. The project is taking eggs laid by curlew on airfields, then rearing and releasing them in the right kinds of habitats for them to thrive. One of the country’s most iconic threatened species, the curlew has suffered significant declines over the past 40 years, but the partnership project will increase numbers in the region to help the species recover. ....
Date Time Saving eggs from airfields is bringing a curlew boom in east of England An innovative Natural England led partnership project that will boost populations of Eurasian curlew is underway in the East of England. The project is taking eggs laid by curlew on airfields, then rearing and releasing them in the right kinds of habitats for them to thrive. One of the country’s most iconic threatened species, the curlew has suffered significant declines over the past 40 years, but the partnership project will increase numbers in the region to help the species recover. It is the first time that the translocation of curlew from airfields has been undertaken at this scale, with 118 eggs already collected. Of these, 76 are now at Pensthorpe Natural Park where they are being incubated, hatched and reared. The rest will be reared by the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT) at Slimbridge. ....