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Surrey Wildlife Trust has launched a new fundraising drive to help much-loved creatures such as hedgehogs, swifts, frogs and toads, which are in decline.
The trust is aiming to raise £40,000 to scale up its work with Surrey schools, community groups and landowners, to create wildlife-rich gardens, streets and public spaces.
The trust says this will help once-common species like swifts and slow-worms to return to our neighbourhoods. Birds, mammals, amphibians and pollinators, like bees and butterflies, will be able to move safely across town and country habitats to find food and shelter.
Surrey Wildlife Trust’s Claire Harris said: “Within living memory, our streets, parks and gardens were alive with buzzing insects, hopping frogs, singing birds and bustling hedgehogs.
“But due to poorly-planned development, the overuse of pesticides and the practice of creating sterile and lifeless outdoor spaces, wildlife is now disappearing and people are becoming disconnected from nature.
“If more people work with us to help wildlife, we’ll bring the joys and benefits nature provides back to our daily lives.”
Focusing on residential areas in Surrey, including Guildford, Farnham, Godalming, Haslemere, Dorking, Redhill and Reigate, the Trust plans to:
By 1970 wildlife was already substantially depleted, says the trust. But since then, the abundance of UK species studied has declined by a further 19 per cent. Nearly one in six species is now at risk of being lost from Britain according to 2023 research from The Wildlife Trusts. And Surrey Wildlife Trust’s 2017 The State of Nature report revealed that one-third of Surrey’s species are in serious decline, with some – like the wryneck and pine marten – already extinct in the county.
The trust’s Save Surrey’s Nature appeal, of which Neighbourhoods for Nature is a part, has so far raised over £500,000 from local donors to support nature’s restoration. This has helped protect rare heathland habitats against the risk of wildfires and has enabled research to prepare for the possible reintroduction of Eurasian beavers to the county’s wetlands. The first beavers, known as nature’s ecosystem engineers, could be released soon to help create thriving wilderness areas that support hundreds of other native species and make our landscapes more resilient against climate change.
To find out more or make a donation visit: surreywildlifetrust.org/neighbourhoods-for-nature

I'm living well for nothing at all! (See: No Trifling Matter: Magpie Trapped in Godalming Sainsbury’s)

Next stop, Debt Chasm! (See: We Should All Be Outraged About the Failure to Deal with Legacy Debt)


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