Blogs
-
in:
GWCT News Blog
under:
GWCT Scotland
In March and early April, GWCT staff commenced the 2025 red grouse monitoring season by carrying out pair counts across Scotland. The results of this year’s pair counts indicate a pronounced decrease compared to 2024
Read more
-
in:
GWCT News Blog
Senior Advisor Mike Swan fears that we are heading towards a situation where well-meaning people will push harder for legislation that would make effective predation control all but impossible, much to the detriment of conservation and biodiversity.
Read more
-
in:
GWCT News Blog
under:
Events
Scientific research, practitioner evidence and environmental accreditation are essential for sustainable game management -- the take home message from GWCT’s lowland gamebird conference.
Read more
-
in:
GWCT News Blog
under:
Advice
, General Licences
Defra will shortly publish an updated GL43 licence and guidance for 2025 for the release of gamebirds on and within 500m of areas that are Special Areas of Conservation (SACs), but not Special Protection Areas (SPAs).
Read more
-
in:
GWCT News Blog
Planting hedgerows and beetle banks is a great way of enhancing habitats, but according to Arthur Barraclough at Bright Seeds, the benefits can be multiplied by drilling conservation crops either side of the new wildlife corridor.
Read more
-
in:
Uplands Blog
under:
Nature
Spring has well and truly arrived over the last few weeks. The hillsides are a lot noisier with the return of curlew and lapwing. The black grouse are less in need of shelter with the weather cheering up, so sightings in the woodlands have dropped off, but there’s plenty of other animals to distract us whilst we’re out.
Read more
-
in:
Uplands Blog
Greyhens are sensitive to disturbance, often leaving their broods unattended, making studying them during this critical period challenging. One potential solution is by monitoring of birds remotely through the use of GPS tags.
Read more
-
in:
Farmland Ecology Blog
under:
Farmland Ecology
, Farming
The year 2024 has officially been declared “the worst year for bumblebees since records began” by the Bumblebee Conservation Trust. While out in the field surveying pollinators across southern England, GWCT researchers also noticed a shocking decline in bee numbers compared to previous years. And they were not alone. What’s behind these declines?
Read more
-
in:
Uplands Blog
under:
Events
Thank you to all to all those who met in February at Barnard Castle for the 2025 Upland Game Conference. The overall message was clear: to safeguard a future for grouse moor management, upland estates across England and Scotland must work together and do their best to capture as much data as possible, using the latest technology.
Read more
-
in:
GWCT News Blog
Over the course of a series of blogs this year I will be considering the current science on peatland management and restoration with a view to challenging some of the ‘accepted truths’.
Read more
Get the Latest News & Advice
Join over 100,000 subscribers and stay updated on our latest advice, research, news and offers.
*You may change your mind any time. For more information, see our Privacy Policy.