London Wildlife Trust

London Wildlife Trust
Founded1981 (1981)
TypeCharitable organization
FocusNature conservation
Location
Area served
London
Key people
David Mooney (CEO), Mathew Frith (Director of Conservation), Leah McNally (Director of Projects & Visitor Engagement), Charlie Sims (Director of Visitor Experience), Rufus Radcliffe (Chair)
Websitewww.wildlondon.org.uk

London Wildlife Trust (LWT), founded in 1981, is a local nature conservation charity for Greater London. It is one of 46 members of the Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts (known as The Wildlife Trusts), each of which is a local nature conservation charity for its area.[1][2] The Trust aims to protect London's wildlife and wild spaces, and it manages 36 nature reserves in Greater London.[3] The Trust provides education services for schools. Local groups work on reserves and organise walks.[4]

The Trust's oldest reserves include Sydenham Hill Wood, which was managed by Southwark Wildlife Group before 1982 and thus was already a Trust reserve at that date. The campaign to save Gunnersbury Triangle began that same year, succeeding in 1983 when a public inquiry ruled that the site could not be developed because of its value for nature.[5][6] The small Centre for Wildlife Gardening in East Dulwich has won an award for its work.[5] The Trust pioneered the systematic recording of data on wildlife and the environment in the capital. Its "Biological Recording Project" became the semi-independent "Greenspace Information for Greater London", known as GIGL.[5]

The Trust has more than 50 members of staff and 1500 volunteers who work together on activities as varied as water management, chalk grassland restoration, helping people with special needs and giving children an opportunity to go pond-dipping. The Trust collaborates with government agencies, local authorities, housing associations, commercial companies, building developers and sponsors to create plans and strategies at local, regional and national level, including the All London Green Grid and Biodiversity Action Plans.[7] The Trust's reserves receive over 230,000 visitors per year.[8][9] The trust is supported by over 10,000 members.[10]

In its strategy document, For a Wilder City. London Wildlife Trust 2015–20, the Trust sets out its vision and mission, as well as plans for a five-year period. The trust states its vision as: "A London alive with nature, where everyone can experience and enjoy wildlife."[8] It describes its mission in three parts as "Protecting, Restoring and Creating wild places for nature",[8] "Engaging, Inspiring and Enabling people to connect with nature",[8] and "Championing, Challenging, and Influencing people to stand up for nature".[8] Among its aims for protecting and restoring, the Trust intends to bring 30 of its reserves to "Favourable Condition" by 2020. It plans to restore the Sydenham and Norwood woodlands, and the "Living Landscape" of the Great North Wood as a part of The Great North Wood Project, and to reintroduce the water vole to the River Wandle.[11]

Warden instructing a Headstart group
"Engaging, Inspiring and Enabling":[12] A volunteer warden instructing a Headstart[13] group

The Trust's aims for engaging and enabling include new visitor centres for the reserves at Camley Street, Gunnersbury Triangle, Woodberry Wetlands and Walthamstow Wetlands. and training young people in its "Wild Talent" programme.[14] Its aims for championing nature include creating a London development biodiversity standard, hosting the London Environment Educators' Forum, collaborating on projects across the city, and opening new reserves such as Byng Road (High Barnet), Braeburn Park (Crayford) and Crane Meadows (Heathrow). Recent projects have helped to support pollinators and to conserve the Welsh Harp reservoir.[15] The Trust has three permanent charitable objectives, namely the conservation of places and objects of scientific interest and natural beauty, and of biodiversity, in Greater London;[12] the education of the public, especially young people, in nature conservation, sustainability, and "the appreciation of natural beauty";[12] and research into nature conservation and the use of natural resources.[12]

  1. ^ "About London Wildlife Trust". London Wildlife Trust. Archived from the original on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 2 June 2016.
  2. ^ "Map of Wildlife Trusts". The Wildlife Trusts. Archived from the original on 17 November 2017. Retrieved 2 June 2016. Each of the 47 Wildlife Trusts is an independent, autonomous charity with its own trustees, whose primary concern is the conservation of nature within its own geographical area.
  3. ^ "Find a nature reserve". London Wildlife Trust. Archived from the original on 23 July 2014.
  4. ^ "Volunteer with us". London Wildlife Trust. Archived from the original on 24 March 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  5. ^ a b c Frith, 2012
  6. ^ Goode, David (2014). Nature in Towns and Cities. William Collins (New Naturalist). pp. 304–308. ISBN 978-0-00-724240-5.
  7. ^ For a Wilder City, p. 4
  8. ^ a b c d e For a Wilder City, p. 5
  9. ^ London Wildlife Trust, Annual Review, 2008–2009 Archived 7 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ For a Wilder City, p. 16
  11. ^ For a Wilder City, pp. 6–8
  12. ^ a b c d For a Wilder City, p. 19
  13. ^ "Headstart courses". EDT. Archived from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  14. ^ For a Wilder City, pp. 9–12
  15. ^ For a Wilder City, pp. 13–16

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