Including the closely related term trees.
… * Northern gannet * Beetle Rhizophagus picipes Otter * Yellow wagtail Depressed river mussel Brandt’s bat Curlew * Cylindrical whorl snail Daubenton’s bat Bearded tit Scarce vapourer moth Whiskered bat Willow tit Argent and sable moth Natterer’s bat Marsh tit Water shrew Tree sparrow Lower plants Noctule bat Grey partridge Moss Aloina brevirostris Pipistrelle bat * Ruff Moss Hennediella…
… variety of life on Earth. It includes not only all species of plants and animals, but also their genetic variation, and the complex ecosystems of which they are all part. It is not restricted to rare or threatened species but includes the whole of the natural world from the commonplace to the critically endangered. Biodiversity includes the wide range of habitats that these animals and plants live…
…: • Ground Game Act 1880 • The National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949. • The Allotment Act 1952. • The Control of Weeds Act 1959. • The Forestry Act 1967 (amended). • The Countryside Act 1968. • Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, (Schedule 5 – relates to protected animals, Schedule 8 to plants). • Town and Country Planning Act 1990. • The Planning and Compensation Act 1991…
… Authority can issue Tree Preservation Orders (TPO) to protect amenity trees. • Common ragwort is notified as a noxious weed under the Weeds Act (1959) and Ragwort Control Act (2003). • There is a duty for landowners to control rabbits and brown hares that are affecting neighbours’ land, (Game Laws 1880). • Felling licences required under Forestry Regulations. • The Wildlife and Countryside Act…
… stanfordensis Brown long-eared bat Black redstart Skylark Redstart Kingfisher Golden plover Vascular plants Shoveler Grey plover Sand leek Teal Black-necked grebe Fingered sedge Wigeon Spotted crake Rare spring-sedge Gadwall Avocet Yellow star of Bethlehem Short-eared owl Sand martin Marsh gentian Pochard Whinchat Mudwort Bittern Woodcock Tasteless water pepper Brent goose Turtle dove Pillwort…