The Wildlife Trusts is an organisation made up of 47 local
Wildlife Trusts in the
United Kingdom plus the
Isle of Man and
Alderney.
The Wildlife Trusts, between them, look after around 2,300 nature reserves covering more than 90,000 hectares. they have a combined membership of over 800,000 members.
The Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts (RSWT), an independent charity, is also part of the partnership and acts as an umbrella group for the local Wildlife Trusts, as well as operating a separate grants unit which administers a number of funds.
Their Patron is HRH The Prince of Wales. Their President is Simon King OBE. The vice presidents are Sir David Attenborough, Prof. Chris Baines, Prof. David MacDonald, Julian Pettifer, Prof. Robert Worcester, Chris Packham, Nick Baker, Bill Oddie and Bill Bolsover.
Activities of The Wildlife Trusts
Wildlife Trusts are local organisations of differing size, history and origins, and can vary greatly in their constitution, activities and membership. However, all wildlife trusts share a common interest in wildlife and biodiversity, rooted in a practical tradition of land management and conservation. Almost all county Wildlife Trusts are significant landowners, with many nature reserves. Collectively they are the third largest voluntary sector landowners in the UK. They often have extensive educational activities, and programmes of public events and education. The Wildlife Trusts centrally and locally also lobby for better protection of the UK's natural heritage, by becoming involved in planning matters and by national campaigning through the
Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts. The trusts rely heavily upon
volunteer labour for many of their activities, but nevertheless employ significant numbers of staff in countryside management and education. Thanks to their work promoting the personal and social development of young people, The Wildlife Trusts is a member of
The National Council for Voluntary Youth Services (NCVYS).
History of The Wildlife Trusts
Today's Wildlife Trust movement began life as The Society for the Promotion of Nature Reserves (SPNR) which was formed by
Charles Rothschild in 1912. During the early years, membership tended to be made up of specialist
naturalists and its growth was comparatively slow. The first independent Trust was formed in Norfolk in 1926 as the Norfolk Naturalists Trust, and it was not until the 1940s and 1950s that a number of new Naturalists' Trusts were formed in
Yorkshire,
Lincolnshire,
West Wales,
Leicestershire and
Cambridgeshire. These early Trusts tended to focus on purchasing land to establish
nature reserves in the geographical areas they served.
Encouraged by the growing number of Trusts, the Society for the Promotion of Nature Reserves (SPNR) began in 1957 to discuss the possibility of forming a national federation of Naturalists' Trusts. Kent Naturalists Trust was established in 1958 with SPNR being active in encouraging its formation. In the following year the SPNR established the County Naturalists' Committee which organised the first national conference for Naturalists' Trusts at Skegness in 1960. By 1964, the number of Trusts had jumped to 36 and the Society for the Promotion of Nature Reserves had changed its name to the Society for the Promotion of Nature Conservation. In recognition of the movement's growing importance, its name was changed to The Royal Society for Nature Conservation in 1981. The organisation is now known as the Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts.
The movement continued to develop throughout the nineteen seventies and by the early nineteen eighties most of today's Trusts had been established. In 1980 the first urban Wildlife Trust (now the Wildlife Trust for Birmingham and the Black Country) was established in the West Midlands, rapidly followed by others in London and Bristol. This was a watershed for the movement which strengthened its focus on 'wildlife and people'. It was during this period that some Trusts changed their name from Naturalist Societies to Trusts for Nature Conservation and then to Wildlife Trusts. The badger logo was adopted by the movement to establish its common identity.
As the number of Trusts grew, so did their combined membership, from 3,000 in 1960 to 21,000 in 1965. Membership topped 100,000 in 1975, and in that year Wildlife Watch was launched as a children's naturalist club. By the late 1980s membership lay at 200,000, reaching 260,000 in 1995 and a 2004 figure of over 500,000. The combined membership for 2007 stood at 670,000 members, 108,000 belonging to the junior branch Wildlife Watch. In January 2011, membership is over 800,000, with over 150,000 Wildlife Watch members.
Geographical location of Wildlife Trusts
Scotland has one Trust.
Wales has six Trusts.
Northern Ireland has one Trust.
England has 36 Trusts, which are largely based on the old county boundaries or small groupings of such counties. There is a small number of specialist Urban Wildlife Trusts that operate in towns and cities.
There are also single trusts covering the Isle of Man, Isles of Scilly, and Alderney in the Channel Islands.
Full list of Trusts
Alderney Wildlife Trust
Avon Wildlife Trust
Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust
Brecknock Wildlife Trust, Wales
Cheshire Wildlife Trust
Cornwall Wildlife Trust
Cumbria Wildlife Trust
Derbyshire Wildlife Trust
Devon Wildlife Trust
Dorset Wildlife Trust
Durham Wildlife Trust
Essex Wildlife Trust
Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust
Gwent Wildlife Trust, Wales
Hampshire and Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust
Herefordshire Nature Trust
Hertfordshire and Middlesex Wildlife Trust
Isles of Scilly Wildlife Trust
Kent Wildlife Trust
Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust
Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust
London Wildlife Trust
Manx Wildlife Trust / Treisht Beiyn-Feie Vannan, Isle of Man
Montgomeryshire Wildlife Trust, Wales
Norfolk Wildlife Trust (registered as Norfolk Naturalists' Trust)
North Wales Wildlife Trust, Wales
Northumberland Wildlife Trust
Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust
Radnorshire Wildlife Trust, Wales
Scottish Wildlife Trust, Scotland
Sheffield and Rotherham Wildlife Trust
Shropshire Wildlife Trust
Somerset Wildlife Trust
Staffordshire Wildlife Trust
Suffolk Wildlife Trust
Surrey Wildlife Trust
Sussex Wildlife Trust
Tees Valley Wildlife Trust
Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire and Peterborough
Wildlife Trust for Birmingham and the Black Country
Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester and North Merseyside
Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales, Wales
Ulster Wildlife Trust, Northern Ireland
Warwickshire Wildlife Trust
Wiltshire Wildlife Trust
Worcestershire Wildlife Trust
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust
See also
List of Conservation topics
Conservation in the United Kingdom
References
External links
Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts
The Wildlife Trusts
The National Council for Voluntary Youth Services (NCVYS)
Category:Organisations based in Nottinghamshire
Category:Organizations established in 1912