A thousand hazel dormice have now been reintroduced into woodland sites in the UK in efforts to save the tiny threatened mammals, conservationists said.
The conservation milestone, in a national reintroduction programme which has been running since 1993, has been reached with the release of 30 dormice in a woodland in Lancashire.
Wildlife charity People’s Trust for Endangered Species (PTES) and partners government agency Natural England and University of Cumbria are releasing 15 breeding pairs or trios of the rare animals into an undisclosed location in the Arnside and Silverdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
The latest releases are part of a wider landscape-scale “back on our map” project to reinstate 10 locally threatened or extinct native species, including hazel dormice, back into the area.
Meet the rare creature making a return to a Lancashire beauty spot
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1,000th hazel dormouse reintroduced to UK - cumbriacrack com
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Environment Bill updates leave green groups doubting UK s commitment to halt nature loss
Some of the UK s biggest nature charities have called amendments made to the Environment Bill this week weakly worded , arguing that they leave loopholes for the UK to backtrack on a commitment to improve nature for the next generation.
The UK s 2019 State of Nature report revealed that most UK species have declined since the 1970s, with 15% now facing extinction
Amendments were made to the Bill on Tuesday (8 June) after it was re-introduced to Parliament following Covid-19-related delays during the last week of May. The changes provide more clarity on a new legally binding target to “halt the decline of wildlife and nature” by the end of the decade, following decades of decline for the majority of native species.