Natur Cymru

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Bearded tits one, bitterns nil

Bearded tits have bred for the first time in Wales, giving one reserve a remarkable first. The delightful twist to this success, as Tony Pickup reports, is that they have colonised the wrong kind of reedbed, one specifically designed for bitterns; nature having a laugh?

Issue 17

We're in this together: people and nature at Moelyci

When a local community bravely took on the management of a mountain farm three years ago, it provided a wonderful opportunity not only to conserve the farm's rich ecology, from the glories of upland heath to the array of other habitats, but also to establish a ne set of human relationships, the human ecology. A dynamic Environment Centre has emerged from competing human interests and perspectives. JOHN HAROLD gives a personal account of the hard but immensely rewarding and enlightening journey on which people and nature have embarked at Moelyci.

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Issue 17

Sand lizards – back in Wales and liking it

Wales has some great examples of the sand dune habitat favoured by sand lizards, so it was a particularly sad loss that fifty years ago this handsome animal became extinct here. To put matters right, sand lizards were brought back to Meirionydd ten years ago, with surprising and exciting results. We are starting to find out much more about this rare reptile, and why it is thriving in Wales, as GRAHAM WILLIAMS reports.

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Issue 17

Monmouthshire Meadows

Flower-filled meadows were once a familiar and enchanting backdrop to rural life. A victim of intensive grassland management, their best hope may lie with landowners who are motivated by a love of nature. A large and diverse group of people who live in Monmouthshire have shown how rewarding it can be to work together to conserve this wonderful habitat, as CAROLINE HOWARD and DIANA BEVAN report.

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Issue 17

Time to fly the flag for the polecat

To "ferret about" implies a restless curiosity in search of something interesting, nicely bringing to mind the lithe domesticated rabbit catcher of that name. Its wild counter-part genetically so close that the two readily breed together, has a much lower profile, however sharp instincts and skills as a hunter and predator. With so few top cats amongst our fauna, we should take pride in the "poultry cat" which has survived in remote places in Wales to spread back across Britain, as KATE WILLIAMSON and JOHNNY BIRKS explain.

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Natur Cymru

Aberleri Fields - paradise regained

Past agricultural drainage and land "improvement" schemes which fought the grain of nature have often yielded modest gains in terms of agricultural production at high costs to biodiversity. But the era of inexorable habitat loss may be coming to an end. Thanks to a good deal of human sweat, nature has responded to the partial reversal of one such scheme. MIKE BAILEY describes how one group of fields is becoming a wildlife paradise.

 

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Natur Cymru

Practical issues in the restoration of woodlands in Snowdonia National Park

Broad-leaved woodlands are one of the most valuable habitats in Snowdonia National Park but they have recently seen some decline. The Park Authority wants to ensure not only an increase in these areas of woodland but also an improvement in their condition through appropriate management. Although agri-environmental schemes and other agreements are helping to achieve this, sometimes the Authority has an opportunity to show its commitment to this aim by buying woodland and undertaking the management of it. EFAN MILNER describes an example of this in Abergwynant Woods, on the Mawddach estuary.

This article is written in Welsh. A translation is available on request.

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Natur Cymru

Saving Wentwood: how the people of Newport helped save Wales' largest anciest forest

In May 2005 large "For Sale" signs appeared at Wentwood Forest. Here RORY FRANCIS and JON WINDER explain what happened next, and how the Woodland Trust (Coed Cadw) came to buy a substantial piece of Wales' largest ancient woodland.

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Watching terns on Llanddwyn Island

The story of conservation in Wales reflects the history of wildlife, and the stories about it are often striking and mirror interesting aspects of our society. Here RICHARD FARMER tells the story of one of the Welsh sites – the people and birds – who were once prominent in the RSPB’s history.

This article is written in Welsh. A translation is available on request.

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