Now there is renewed hope for four species whose benefits range from fortifying river banks and keeping problematic populations under control to creating new habitats for others 🧵👇 thetimes.co.uk/article/the-lo…
🦫 Beaver
Beavers are what is known as a keystone species, they play an outsized role in shaping the environment around them and they can be pivotal to ecosystem restoration.
As soon as they arrive on a river bank, they begin to engineer it, felling trees to build their dams
Beaver damns create habitats for a plethora of other species.
🐞🐸🐟 Insects, amphibians and fish thrive in the waters behind their dams, providing food for 🐦.
🦇 swoop into the gaps that felled trees open up in the foliage and eating the insects that spawn in their ponds
🦫 were reintroduced in Scotland in 2009.
In England, however, their reintroduction has been stalled by the fact that they are not designated as a native species, which means they can be released only into fenced enclosures.
This is about to change
The government is expected this year to fulfil its pledge to designate them a native species in England. It has run a public consultation on what guidelines it should set for how to introduce them to the wild
🐾 Lynx
Such support has been less forthcoming, however, to those trying to reintroduce the lynx.
Lynx could be beneficial in helping the Scottish Highlands' forests grow anew, by controlling the ballooning deer population and stopping it from eating every sapling
🐾 Although lynx do sometimes kill sheep, unlike wolves they are loath to venture into farmland.
For this reason, Steve Micklewright, chief executive of @treesforlifeuk, thinks that with careful understanding they have a good chance of being reintroduced to Britain
White-tailed eagle 🦅
The white-tailed eagle returned to 🏴 in 2019, when the @RoyDennisWF, in partnership with Forestry England, released six birds on the Isle of Wight.
They have released 19 more birds since then and plan to release a total of 60
The return of Britain’s biggest bird of prey will have a positive impact on their ecosystem. By preying on meso-predators such as foxes and crows, the eagles will reduce pressure on ground-nesting birds such as woodcocks and curlews
Bison 🦬
Bison have not roamed Britain freely for 6,000 years.
In May, though, post-Brexit red tape notwithstanding, four of these shaggy giants will find a new home in West Blean Woods nature reserve in Kent
🦬 “Bison are what we call ecosystem engineers,” says Mark Habben, head of living collections at the @WildwoodTrust.
🗣️“They’re a really large, powerful animal, the benefits of which are seen through a lot of their behaviours”
By eating bark and rubbing up against trunks to remove excess coat, bison kill off selected trees — often non-native species — providing dead wood for insects to eat and inhabit, and clearing areas to allow more light into the undergrowth, helping smaller species thrive
The reintroduction of vanished species is not on its own enough to rebalance ecosystems but it is just one among many interventions that rewilders make to return landscapes to health.
🗣️“Rewilding is a marathon, but it starts with a sprint,” says Alastair Driver of @RewildingB
Three Russian cosmonauts arrived at the International Space Station last night in flight suits made in the yellow and blue of the Ukrainian flag, in what appeared to be a daring statement against the war thetimes.co.uk/article/cosmon…
Oleg Artemyev, Denis Matveev and Sergey Korsakov blasted off from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan for a six-month stay aboard the orbiting laboratory yesterday, joining the crew of two Russians, four Americans and one German
In an extraordinary move, the three new arrivals emerged from their Soyuz capsule after docking with the space station wearing bright yellow jumpsuits with blue stripes, instead of the standard-issue blue uniform thetimes.co.uk/article/cosmon…
@trussliz In the early hours of Thursday morning Liz Truss, the foreign secretary, was standing at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire waiting with the families and loved ones of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe and Anoosheh Ashoori thetimes.co.uk/article/nazani…
@trussliz The reunion of the families was, Truss says, the most privileged moment of her near decade in government.
🗣 "Just to see particularly Gabriella and her joy and her excitement to be with her mum again, it was just beautiful" thetimes.co.uk/article/nazani…
Thoughtful, a bit of a philosopher according to one of his aides, the mayor of Ukraine’s capital has a PhD and a disarming ability to conduct interviews in four languages
Vitali Klitschko is also a former world heavyweight boxing champion, and it is the pugilistic side of him we know best
With the raunchy Regency drama soon returning, Luke Thompson who plays Benedict tells @mulkerrins about becoming an instant sex symbol after ten years in theatre thetimes.co.uk/article/luke-t…
“I sort of feel quite neutral about it really,” he says with a grin. “And I’m not talking about my body necessarily, but obviously it’s lovely to live in people’s imaginations. That’s what you hope for, right?”
So he doesn’t mind being objectified? Being, well, a sex symbol?
🗣 “No. Well, you know, if indeed I am,” he adds, hurriedly. “Letting people put something of themselves onto you – I think that’s lovely”
🔺 EXCLUSIVE: An elite Ukrainian drone unit has destroyed dozens of “priority targets” by attacking Russian forces as they sleep thetimes.co.uk/article/specia…
Aerorozvidka, a specialist air reconnaissance unit within the army, has been picking off tanks, command trucks and vehicles carrying electronic equipment since the invasion began.
“We strike at night, when Russians sleep,” Yaroslav Honchar, the unit’s commander said
Russian forces are static when night falls, Honchar explained from his base of operations in Kyiv, with their fear of Ukrainian shelling forcing them to hide their tanks in villages between houses, knowing that conventional artillery cannot risk hitting civilians
At least three blasts were heard in the city, the Ukraine 24 television station reported. The news outlet published a short video of a mushroom-shaped plume of smoke rising on the horizon
Located 45 miles from the border with Poland 🇵🇱, Lviv has for the most part escaped strikes from Russian forces and has served as a safe haven for refugees fleeing besieged cities