Working Together to Tackle the Climate Crisis
I’ve been involved with the impacts of climate change for most of my working life - as a research scientist, I wrote my first paper on changes in wildlife caused by climate change back in 1987.…
I’ve been involved with the impacts of climate change for most of my working life - as a research scientist, I wrote my first paper on changes in wildlife caused by climate change back in 1987.…
With the wettest winter on record following a couple of years after the 40°C heatwave, few people can doubt the climate has changed, and is going to change more. Not all the impacts on wildlife…
In a new report published today The Wildlife Trusts demonstrate how a variety of natural landscapes in the UK can store carbon, making the case for addressing the climate and nature emergencies…
The Cam Valley Forum has released a Manifesto for the River Cam, and coverage has been growing in the press about the problems facing our iconic chalk streams
Matt Hayes, research assistant at the Cambridge Museum of Zoology, has worked with the Zoology Department's Insect Ecology Research Group to conserve endangered butterflies. Maintaining…
There are plenty of ways you can take action against climate change in your own backyard or local greenspace.
Our CEO considers the threat of climate-driven extinction and how the new and growing protest groups overlap with and complement our work
The evidence is unequivocal and stark: global warming and climate change are here to stay - and, as Sir David Attenborough told the UN Climate Summit in Poland, we have to take action
A workshop looking and climate change and it's impacts on habitats and species
In his second blog on the subject, our Chief Executive Brian Eversham discusses the long-term effects the long hot summer could have on our wildlife.
Brian Eversham explains the impacts of the weather on reserve management and different species