News

WWT calls for more accountability for environmental protection
Green Party MP Caroline Lucas receives her copy of the new report from WWT's team “Better accountability and better enforcement to protect our natural resources” was the message from speakers at the launch of WWT
20 July 2016

Opposition parties challenge new PM and Environment Secretary, following WWT report
Green Party MP Caroline Lucas, WWT CEO Martin Spray and Labour Shadow Environment Secretary Rachael Maskell Liberal Democrat peer, The Baroness Parminter Opposition parties have
19 July 2016

New WWT report: PM and Environment Secretary urged to plan ahead
Children learning how wetlands help to reduce flooding, pollution and drought Families and businesses will be worse off if a Government manifesto commitment to the environment falls due to Brexit, says the Wildfowl &a
19 July 2016

Get closer to nature - get more from your summer. Be a Nature Explorer!
For budding explorers, adventure seekers and those looking to get more from the summer holidays this year, become a Nature Explorer at WWT Llanelli Wetland Centre! Visit between 21 July – 4 September and armed with your very own passport of discovery,
18 July 2016

Lead poisoning - Government announces decision
The Government has rejected a stakeholder group’s recommendation that lead ammunition should be phased out on account of its risk to wildlife and human health. A key aspect for WWT is that wildfowl often ingest poisonous lead pellets, left on the groun
14 July 2016

Wetlands and leaving the EU 2, the sequel
Post by Peter Morris, WWT's Head of Public Relations & Campaigns Our Wetlands and leaving the EU blog following the EU Referendum result received a lot of good feedback from people who appreciated a bit of informed light commentary rather than heavy p
12 July 2016

Success at Russian breeding grounds lightens grief over chick deaths
Thirty spoon-billed sandpiper chicks have been hatched by conservationists in Russia over the weekend. The good news follows the tragic death last week of the world’s first captive-bred spoon-billed sandpipers. The Russian chicks have been hatched from
12 July 2016

Award for Schools Environment Project
Hollickwood Primary School children get planting![/caption] A project in which schoolchildren help to reduce flooding and pollution, while learning about wildlife, has won a major national environmental award. The project was run across 10 schools in N
7 July 2016

Sad news for spoon-billed sandpipers
These are the only critically endangered spoon-billed sandpiper chicks ever bred in captivity, but sadly neither survived for more than 60 hours. Each weighed only a few grammes and was barely bigger than a bumble bee. (c) Ben Cherry / WWT Seven eggs wer
5 July 2016

Wetlands and leaving the EU
The EU funds many research projects, including WWT's work to slow a 50% decline in red-breasted geese numbers. Blog post by Peter Morris, WWT's Head of Public Relations & Campaigns: The impact of leaving the EU on
30 June 2016

WWT becomes a formal partner on the Ramsar Convention
WWT became a formal partner of the global convention for wetlands – the Ramsar Convention – earlier this month. WWT Chief Executive Martin Spray joined Acting Secretary General of Ramsar, Ania Grobicki, to sign a Memorandum of Understanding that plac
28 June 2016

Cranes pushed to the edge by floods on the Somerset Levels
A flock of cranes that ended up at the centre of a once-in-200-year flood has given researchers a rare insight into how wildlife copes with extreme weather. The cranes’ progress was being tracked by researchers from the University of Exeter, the Wildfo
27 June 2016

Dragonfly Hotspot attracts an amazing giant LEGO® brick dragonfly called Emily!
WWT Caerlaverock is set to become a Dragonfly Hotspot in partnership with the British Dragonfly Society (BDS). In celebration, a giant LEGO brick sculpture of a dragonfly will visit us during the summer, alongside its living counterparts. The world’s m
21 June 2016

New behaviour seen in rare wading birds
A ménage-a-trois between breeding black-tailed godwits has been witnessed for the first time ever by staff at the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT) in Norfolk. Staff monitoring the rare birds at WWT’s Welney reserve, one of only two places in the UK
16 June 2016

Eggs mean fresh hope for spoon-billed sandpipers
One of the world’s rarest birds has a new hope: it’s laid eggs in captivity for the first time. Seven eggs have been laid so far by two spoon-billed sandpipers at the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT) in Slimbridge, Gloucestershire, UK. The flock wa
14 June 2016