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Showing 21 - 40 of 206 results
  1. Data provider: Botanical Society of Britain & Ireland

    BSBI helps people learn more about plants and make a contribution to world-class science. We do this by fostering an appreciation and understanding of our wild plants and offering opportunities to learn more about them in a friendly, supportive environment. We bring beginners and experts together and provide our network of volunteers with a dedicated support system as they undertake high quality research across Britain and Ireland. Acting in the public interest to advance our scientific knowledge, BSBI is laying down a legacy for the future by producing data and interpretation which help conserve and protect our wild plants.

  2. Data provider: Bournemouth University

    Bournemouth University (BU) is one of the UK’s leading modern universities; we create forward-thinking graduates with the skills and flexibility to succeed throughout their career. Our community includes around 19,000 students and our four faculties offer degrees in creative, professional, technological, scientific and humanities specialisms. Research is an integral part of BU, providing solutions to real-world problems and informing the education we deliver. Our students are a key part of this research, co-creating knowledge with us and playing a crucial role in everything we do.

  3. Data provider: Bristol Regional Environmental Records Centre

  4. Data provider: British Bryological Society

    The BBS has a full programme of field meetings, a paper reading meeting, recording and research projects, an international academic journal and a lively membership magazine. Find us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/britishmoss/

  5. Data provider: British Dragonfly Society Recording Scheme

    Promoting and encouraging the study, conservation, public awareness and understanding of Dragonflies and their habitats in the UK.

  6. Data provider: British Herpetological Society

    The British Herpetological Society is one of the oldest and most prestigious Societies of its kind in the world. Founded in 1947 by Britain's leading herpetologists, the BHS still enjoys national learned status. The Society's Herpetological Journal is ranked as one of the leading scientific publications devoted to herpetology. The Society actively supports Conservation, Research, Education and responsible Captive breeding. The Society liaises closely with other relevant organisations to support conservation of native herptiles, for example ARG UK , ARC and local amphibian and reptile groups. In 2020 and 2021, the BHS donated a total of £35,000 to ARC to enable purchases of land parcels in Hampshire and Dorset, to safeguard local fauna and flora.

  7. Data provider: British Lichen Society

    The BLS works to promote the study and conservation of lichens and their habitats and welcomes all who are interested, from beginner to expert.

  8. Data provider: British Mycological Society

  9. Data provider: British Myriapod and Isopod Group

    Actively developing identification resources and encouraging recording to improve our knowledge and conservation of centipedes, millipedes and woodlice and waterlice.

  10. Data provider: British Trust for Ornithology

    The BTO collects, analyses, interprets and delivers the scientific information that underpins conservation action, halting declines and restoring populations of birds and other wildlife. It does this through its highly effective partnership of volunteers and paid professionals. Being independent and non-campaigning means our work is highly respected and widely used.

  11. Data provider: Broadland Environmental Services Limited

  12. Data provider: Buglife

    Buglife actively works to save Britain’s rarest little animals, everything from bees to beetles, worms to woodlice and jumping spiders to jellyfish.

  13. Data provider: Bumblebee Conservation Trust

    The Bumblebee Conservation Trust works to monitor, conserve and protect all of Britain's bumblebee species

  14. Data provider: Butterfly Conservation

    Butterfly Conservation is the UK charity dedicated to saving butterflies and moths. Butterflies and moths are important parts of the ecosystem. They are beautiful and inspirational and people enjoy seeing them in their gardens and the countryside. They are sensitive to change and their fortunes help us assess the health of our environment. Two-thirds of butterfly and moth species are in decline. This is a warning that cannot be ignored.

  15. Data provider: Caledonian Conservation

    Providing a range of ecology and ornithology services for development and conservation in the UK

  16. Data provider: Cambridgeshire & Peterborough Environmental Records Centre

    CPERC manages species and habitat data to provide the most comprehensive source of local biodiversity information for our area For more information on our records please contact us direct

  17. Data provider: Capturing our Coast

    An Heritage Lottery Funded Citizen Science project that aims to (i) demonstrate the efficacy of volunteers collecting robust and meaningful ecological data around the coasts of UK (ii) to collate abundance data of a specific number of intertidal species according to set protocols, with the objective of maximising the number of surveys per region to an adequate level to build meaningful data sets from which change can be detected and ecological hypotheses can be tested.

  18. Data provider: Caring for God’s Acre

    Working nationally to support groups and individuals to investigate, care for, and enjoy burial grounds.

  19. Data provider: Central Scotland Green Network Trust

    The Central Scotland Green Network Trust (CSGNT) was established in March 2014. We were created to provide capacity to help realise the Vision for the Central Scotland Green Network (CSGN). This Vision is that: ‘by 2050 Central Scotland will have been transformed into a place where the environment adds value to the economy and where people’s lives are enriched by its quality’. Our role and activities are intended to be complementary to, and supportive of, the wider CSGN network. Our principal aim is to add value, and through delivery, create change.

  20. Data provider: Centre for Environmental Data and Recording

    The Centre for Environmental Data and Recording (CEDaR) is the Local Records Centre (LRC) for Northern Ireland and supports biological recording through working in partnerships with numerous individuals and organisations. It collects, stores, manages and releases information on the wildlife of Northern Ireland and its coastal waters. It also manages a number of recording initiatives, such as species surveys, websites and training courses. CEDaR aims to ensure that fit-for-purpose biological records are available for education, research, monitoring, nature conservation, planning, policy and commercial enquiries. Established at the Ulster Museum in January 1995, CEDaR is a partnership between Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA), National Museums Northern Ireland (NMNI) and the local biological recording community.