Bringing Wildlife Back

Bringing Wildlife Back

Corn bunting (Milaria calandra) singing in oilseed rape crop at an arable farm in Hertfordshire. April 2011. - Chris Gomersall/2020VISION

Ian Jelley, Director of Living Landscapes for Warwickshire Wildlife Trust, explains why helping nature recover is as essential for us as it is for wildlife.

In the modern times we live in, it’s easy to forget just how reliant we are on the natural world. Especially as technology advances, solving life’s challenges and sometimes providing solutions to problems we didn’t even know we had. But with that ‘progression’ comes further separation from our relationship with the natural world; and that can result in unintended consequences.

Take, for example, the variety of year-round fruit and vegetables available in supermarkets, sourced from around the world. Whilst this can improve our diets and increase access to fresh food, it also adds to our disconnect with nature. No longer is it evident when the ‘season’ is for certain produce, and the ‘story’ of how the food is produced is often lost as it arrives on our plate from a packet.

Marmalade hoverfly

Marmalade hoverfly by Chris Lawrence

To us as consumers, it’s not apparent that one in four mouthfuls of food we eat relies on pollinating insects to help it grow. Therefore, the threat of extinction that hovers over so many of our pollinating insects, and the link between that and our own food supply, is missed.

We exist in a paradox of wildlife at the brink of extinction, and a modern way of life that means we’ve never been more disconnected with the relevance and value of the natural world. This often means that our actions, unintended or otherwise, contribute towards the further decline of species.

Some may think, â€˜What does it matter if some little bug that I’ve never heard of or seen dies out?’

The answer to this is that it matters greatly. Everything in the natural world (including us) is connected. Imagine our world as a game of Jenga. Each wooden block in the Jenga tower represents a different species on our planet, with the block on the top representing us. If you start taking out the species below then you risk the whole stack crashing down, people included. Because we rely on all the others to hold us up.

The impact of climate change magnifies the pressures on threatened species and whilst nature-based solutions could help us mitigate the climate crisis, our decision making at a political level does not enable joined-up thinking to tackle this and other crises that have economic and social consequences.

So how do we reconnect people with the importance of the natural world, whilst also putting in place the measures needed to bring wildlife back? The Wildlife Trusts believe the answer to these questions lie with our vision for 30 by 30

This vision for a wilder future has three pillars –

  • 30% of land and sea contributing to nature’s recovery by 2030
  • 1 in 4 people taking action for wildlife by 2030
  • Nature-based solutions at the heart of post COVID-19 recovery, climate change adaptation and future decision making.

Evidence suggests that across a range of different species, where there is less than 30% cover in a landscape, habitat patches become small and isolated, and species richness (the number of species in any one area), abundance and survival rates decline. At more than 30%, habitat patches will generally be larger and the distance between patches will typically be less, so they are better connected. This means that if local extinctions do occur, other populations of the same species can move into the area easily, or indeed prevent the local extinction in the first place.

We are the first generation to recognise the impact we are having on the natural world, and perhaps the last that can save it before it’s too late. We can all play our part in nature’s recovery, but must act now! We can manage our land with wildlife in mind, whether that land is a block of flats’ communal garden, a town park or farm field. Those who don’t have access to land can still take action for wildlife in other ways by supporting their local Wildlife Trust, volunteering, or by writing to their MP or other decision makers at work or school to demand better policies and laws,.

Making space for nature helps to create healthy soils for growing more food, clean air to breathe, clean water and green space for exercise, not to mention flood management and carbon capture. mitigating the impact of climate change. So, what’s good for nature is good for us too.