Supported by Rewilding Britain, the Network helps practitioners who are rewilding on land or at sea to connect, share experiences, ideas and expertise. Working together is crucial if we’re to respond ...
Through grazing, foraging, wallowing and trampling, the hefty bison boosts habitat diversification. Whereas the American bison possesses that characteristic stooped head profile, indicating a love for ...
How rewilding can reduce carbon emissions, remove carbon from the atmosphere and halt the ongoing biodiversity loss. The wetlands of Thursley heath common. For every ...
Watercress Farm is one of Belmont’s nature recovery and connection projects just outside Bristol. The rewilding project aims to restore an environmentally degraded landscape to benefit nature, climate ...
Restoring the ecological processes associated with herbivores is often a priority for rewilding projects, but knowing which absent herbivores are likely to suit a site can be a challenge.
Pioneering rewilding projects the length and breadth of Britain are already making strides in delivering large-scale landscape recovery schemes, creating new, diverse nature-based employment and ...
See who’s rewilding across Britain, from the coast of Cornwall right up to the Highlands of Scotland, and how they’re doing it. All these projects are part of the Rewilding Network.