North Wales Wildlife Trust Explained

North Wales Wildlife Trust
Native Name:Ymddiriedolaeth Natur Gogledd Cymru
Type:Registered Charity
Location:36 reserves (1,821 acres in total), six local branches
Revenue:£5,585,791 (2024)
Num Employees:50+ (2024)
Volunteers:700+
Predecessor:North Wales Naturalists
Headquarters:Bangor, Gwynedd
Area Served:North Wales, UK
Website:northwaleswildlifetrust.org.uk
Key People:Frances Cattanach, CEO
Members:9,000+ (April 2024)

The North Wales Wildlife Trust (NWWT) (Welsh: Ymddiriedolaeth Natur Gogledd Cymru) is the Wildlife Trust for North Wales. Established in 1962, it covers the vice counties of Anglesey, Caernarfonshire, Merionethshire, Denbighshire and Flintshire with over 9300 members.[1] It is a registered charity and a member of the Wildlife Trusts Partnership with the head office being located in Bangor and its eastern office located at Aberduna nature reserve in Flintshire.

The aims of the NWWT are:

History

The history of the NWWT can be traced back to 1953 when two botanists RH Roberts, a local headmaster and WS "Bill" Lacey, a lecturer in University College of North Wales who carried out vegetation surveys and recommended that the fens of Cors Goch and Cors Geirch be acquired as nature reserves. In 1962, the Society for the Promotion of Nature Reserves stepped in to make a holding purchase until a local conservation body could be established to buy and manage nature reserves. In 1962, 65 people met and formed The North Wales Naturalists from which a council of ten was elected with Colonel JC Wynn Finch as chairman and Dr WS Lacey as Hon Secretary. By 1965, the Trust had 359 members and three nature reserves covering just over . Over the following years, several other local Trusts would provide their reserves and assets to the North Wales Naturalists and while some larger branches would be separated to form independent Trusts; 1972 West Wales Trust formed the Meirionnydd Branch, 1982 Montgomeryshire Branch became the Montgomeryshire Trust for Nature Conservation, 1988 the Trust was renamed as the 'North Wales Wildlife Trust'.

Bill Lacey (Lacey Lecture)

The annual Lacey Lecture, presented by the NWWT, is a tradition which has been going for over 15 years. It is in memory of Professor William Lacey,[2] known as 'Bill' Lacey who achieved great academic distinction and international standing in palaeobotany. He was also a teacher and a practical man when it came to conservation. He became the NWWT's first secretary, was its chairman for 14 years and then president.

Lacey was an academic, teacher and practical conservationist.

Reserves

The NWWT manages the following 35 nature reserves (in total):

The NWWT also owns 450 acres at Bryn Ifan, where it intends to restore Celtic rainforests to the upland farms.

NWWT runs four Living Landscapes projects, extending conservation work off reserves and onto private sites by working with landowners. They are currently the Alun and Chwiler, Anglesey Fens, River Dee and Wrexham Industrial Estate Living Landscapes. This work improves opportunities for people and wildlife and follows the principles of bigger, better and more connected landscapes. Within the Wrexham Industrial Estate project the trust manages sites on behalf of corporate bodies, while further supporting other organisations to advise best management practices for wildlife conservation on their own land.[3]

"We work with businesses, landholders, farmers and community groups on and around the Wrexham Industrial Estate, advising on conservation land management and improving connectivity for wildlife across one of the largest industrial areas in the UK. This involves carrying out surveys for conservation priority species, mapping habitats and drawing up management prescriptions for businesses operating on the industrial estate." - Jonny Hulson, Living Landscape Officer[4]
Other projects run by NWWT include:

Living seas,[5] which helps run Seagrass Ocean Rescue in conjunction with World Wide Fund for Nature,[6] Project Seagrass and Swansea University. And Project SIARC, which won Wales Project of the Year in the 2023 National Lottery Awards.[7]

The Stand for Nature Youth project, Including a climate conservation traineeship once a year.[8] The Welsh Beaver project. And a variety of Invasive and Non-Native species work.

The charity has 2 subsidaries, NWWT trading company, and Enfy Ecolocical services

Local branches

It has local members branches (who organise and lead local walks, talks and meetings), each member of the NWWT will automatically become a member of their local branch, however. They are:

References

  1. Web site: NWWT impact report 2022-23 . 6 April 2024 . North Wales Wildlife Trust.
  2. Hibbert. F. A.. January 1983. Professor W. S. Lacey, B.Sc, Ph.D., D.Sc, F.L.S., F.G.S.. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. en. 86. 1–2. iii–ix. 10.1111/j.1095-8339.1983.tb00713.x. 0024-4074.
  3. News: MWL Systems discovers rare orchids on its land West Cheshire and North Wales Chamber of Commerce. 17 July 2018. West Cheshire and North Wales Chamber of Commerce. 12 September 2018. en-GB.
  4. News: MWL Systems Discovers Rare Orchids on its Land. 2 August 2018. Business News Wales. 12 September 2018. en-GB.
  5. Web site: Living Seas North Wales Wildlife Trust . 2024-04-06 . www.northwaleswildlifetrust.org.uk . en.
  6. Web site: 2023-08-21 . Planting hope - How seagrass can tackle climate change WWF . 2024-04-06 . www.wwf.org.uk . en.
  7. Web site: Causes . National Lottery Good . Wildlife expert and TV presenter honours Welsh shark project . 2024-04-06 . National Lottery Good Causes . en-GB.
  8. Web site: 2023-06-07 . Young environmentalists sought for conservation opportunity in North Wales . 2024-04-06 . InYourArea.co.uk.

External links