Nature Recovery Fund

Nature Recovery Fund

£11,423 of £24,500 goal

Nature Recovery Zones with Ellie Harrison

Support the Nature Recovery Fund today and create a bigger, better and brighter future for our county's wildlife.

Nature Recovery Zones help connect our existing reserves, along with other wild places, increasing biodiversity and giving sanctuary to vulnerable species.
This ambitious, landscape-scale approach is a new way of working for us. Looking at the county as a whole rather than individual reserves, Nature Recovery Zones (NRZs) aim to ensure the long-term future of vulnerable species by creating bigger, better quality and more connected habitats.

By supporting the Nature Recovery Fund you’ll help us work in
the wider countryside to create ‘super reserves’.

In addition to nature reserve management, such as coppicing and
conservation grazing that creates habitat for vulnerable species, a donation today will also help us move beyond the boundaries of our reserves.

Curlew (c) Jon Hawkins Surrey Hills Photography

Donate £35

Could help wetland scrape creation for wading birds.
Highland cattle

Donate £50

Could help care for native cattle for conservation grazing.
Dormouse (c) Elizabeth Pimley

Donate £75

Could help coppice woodland to create more habitat for dormice to live in.

Our successes and learnings on our nature reserves have allowed us to be bold in our 2030 strategy.

The UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world. If we cannot stop the decline in Gloucestershire by 2030, what we have lost already will be gone for good. Increasing our network of NRZs and connecting our precious wildlife is a key way for us to help to drive nature’s recovery. Because if we leave it much longer, time will run out.

You'll enable us to work with neighbouring landowners and partners to
encourage wildlife-friendly land management. These species-rich areas will help connect nature reserves, giving everything from orchids, moths and beetles to hares, water voles and nightjars the larger spaces they need to adapt to the pressures they increasingly face. 

Have a look at some of our already successful species below

Donate to the Nature Recovery Fund

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