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Wildlife in Cheshire

Cheshire holds a variety of different landscapes, which are home to a huge number of plants and animals, some common and some rare or endangered.

Fertile lowlands cover most of Cheshire, broken up by the rugged mid-Cheshire ridge which runs north-south across the county, and the fringes of the Pennines extending into the far east of the county. In between, rivers, their flood plains and estuaries are a haven for birds, some resident and many more visiting migrants. Cheshire’s many lakes and ponds, some glacial in origin and some man-made, make the county a paradise for aquatic life, such as the endangered great crested newt. Our woodlands include fragments of the WildWood, the ancient forest which covered most of the country in prehistoric times.

Cheshire has much to offer anyone who enjoys wildlife or being outdoors. Whether you want to ramble along quiet footpaths or explore more rugged scenery, if you are a keen botanist or bird watcher, or just enjoy the wildlife that can be seen from the kitchen window, Cheshire Wildlife Trust can help you get the most from our countryside.

Historical Perspective
Our countryside has been shaped by thousands of years of history

Woodlands
Find out more about Cheshire’s many different types of woodland

Grasslands
Explore the beauty of our few remaining flower-rich meadows

Ponds
Why is Cheshire the ‘Pond Capital of Europe’?

Estuaries
Estuaries, internationally important for their birdlife

Heathland
Find out more about our heathlands, a rare and fragile habitat

Meres and Mosses
Cheshire’s Meres and Mosses are unique to the north-west

 

Conservation Strategy

Cheshire Wildlife Trust has developed a Conservation Strategy to help focus and prioritise our work for the years ahead. Initially covering a five-year period the Conservation Strategy builds upon our successes so far and brings our plans for the future in line with the national Wildlife Trust's Development Strategy.

Our Strategy is framed around four main aims designed to help us achieve our vision of ‘a Cheshire region richer in wildlife by 2020'. It incorporates our approach to tackling issues such as climate change, maintenance of healthy natural ‘life-support' systems (ecosystem services) and our need to work in partnership to achieve a ‘Living Landscape' 1 for the Cheshire region. Our Strategy also considers how we will engage everyone in caring for and understanding our natural environment and how we might live and work in a more sustainable way.

Download a copy of our Conservation Strategy

 

Originally published in Cheshire life magazine, our Wild Alphabet is an introduction to the wild animals, plant and places in our county.

A is for Ancient woodland, Alder, Anemone and more...

B is for Biodiversity, Birch, Brimstone butterfly...

C is for Chaffinch, Corn marigold, Comma butterfly..

   
   

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