Main content

WWT

Partner organisation of the Watches

Blog posts in total 14

Posts

  1. Experiencing nature with all your senses

    Experiencing nature with all your senses

    By Leanne McCormella, Comms and Marketing Executive at Washington Wetland Centre

    Read more

  2. Swansong or staying strong: the uncertain future of the Bewick’s swan

    Swansong or staying strong: the uncertain future of the Bewick’s swan

    Migration is one of the most hazardous tasks a bird can undertake.

    Read more

  3. How restoring saltmarsh can help us fight climate change

    How restoring saltmarsh can help us fight climate change

    “Code Red for humanity.” The IPCC report published earlier this year was clear on what the prognosis is if we don’t confirm deep cuts to emissions by 2030.

    Read more

  4. Flying under the radar

    Flying under the radar

    Dumpy, drab, stocky… these are just some of the words used to describe the unassuming red knot. Yet this bird has a surprisingly impressive story that belies its appearance.

    Read more

  5. How I fell in love with birdsong again

    How I fell in love with birdsong again

    By Leigh Pouse, WWT Blue Prescribing Participant

    Read more

  6. The healing power of wetlands

    The healing power of wetlands

    In winter, wetlands come to life with over-wintering birds filling the skies, their reflections intensifying their vast numbers.

    Read more

  7. What lies beneath: unearthing eels with eDNA

    What lies beneath: unearthing eels with eDNA

    By Laura Weldon, Principal Research Officer, Wetland Science at WWT

    Read more

  8. Estuaries: Nature’s superhighways

    Estuaries: Nature’s superhighways

    When we look at our estuaries, we see them teeming with life: waders feeding and gulls swooping.

    Read more

  9. Say ‘cheese’!

    Say ‘cheese’!

    We like to think we’re pretty tuned into what goes on around our reserves. But sometimes we’re reminded that the natural world is a secretive and mysterious place.

    Read more

  10. Brent geese: urban explorers

    Brent geese: urban explorers

    Why do Brent geese swap the Greenland ice caps for for Dublin’s green parks?

    Read more

  11. Is it a duck, or is it a goose?

    Is it a duck, or is it a goose?

    Common shelduck are much bigger than mallards and shovelers and spend much more time on land.

    Read more

  12. Call of the curlew: what can be done to stop its decline?

    We are home to a quarter of the entire global population of curlew. If the curlew dies out in the UK, they are in real danger of disappearing from the earth all together. Find out more about the work being done to save them in this guest post by the Wildfowl & Wetland Trust (WWT).

    Read more

  13. Build it right and the amphibians will come!

    You might assume that any pond will attract amphibians, but there are a few things you can do if you want to give them the best chance at survival. Here are some top tips from the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust.

    Read more

  14. Greylags: The fall and rise of Britain’s only native breeding goose

    Greylags: The fall and rise of Britain’s only native breeding goose

    The British greylag goose is Britain’s only native breeding goose, but fascinatingly, not all greylag are alike.

    Read more