We use some essential cookies to make this website work.
We’d like to set additional cookies to understand how you use GOV.UK, remember your settings and improve government services.
We also use cookies set by other sites to help us deliver content from their services.
You have accepted additional cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time.
You have rejected additional cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time.
Departments, agencies and public bodies
News stories, speeches, letters and notices
Detailed guidance, regulations and rules
Reports, analysis and official statistics
Consultations and strategy
Data, Freedom of Information releases and corporate reports
What you need to do if you keep, grow, find or sell certain invasive plant species and your responsibilities to prevent their spread.
Salisbury Plain Training Area is the biggest military training space in the UK, hosting not only service personnel carrying out vital exercises, but also a huge variety of wildlife.
South East homes to butterflies and bees among creatures getting share of £14.5m support fund to fight extinction
Back from the Brink initiative sees Breckland-based Shifting Sands project use surprising methods and rabbits to bring about record numbers of rare species.
Some of Devon’s rarest plants are to be moved to new sites in the county as work continues on the Lower Otter Restoration Project (LORP).
The rare Fen Orchid (Liparis loeselii) has been rediscovered by an 11-year-old boy at Laugharne-Pendine Burrows in South Wales.
Conservation work to ensure the survival of 2 of Britain’s rarest plants to be carried out by Natural England and Torridge District Council.
Sensory garden demonstrates how schools and gardeners can make outdoor spaces accessible and exciting for all.
Important flower-rich grasslands in Luton gain national protection through SSSI designation.
Royal Botanic Gardens were awarded nearly £84,000 in the 2014 Fast Forward Competition to fund their ‘Horticultural Micropropagation Services’ project.
Common Moor SSSI is officially brought into a recovering condition, following improved site management for the rare Culm grassland.
Rare and unique fog oases ecosystems in the Sechura and Atacama deserts of Peru and Chile are under threat.
Protection for rare birds and butterflies across mid Cornwall has increased.
Natural England has officially designated the Mid Cornwall Moors as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Don’t include personal or financial information like your National Insurance number or credit card details.
To help us improve GOV.UK, we’d like to know more about your visit today. Please fill in this survey (opens in a new tab).