24 08, 2018

London wants to become a ‘national park city’ – is that a contradiction in terms?

By |2019-07-23T07:53:00+00:00August 24th, 2018|Blog, Conservation Policy, People & nature, Protected Areas|Comments Off on London wants to become a ‘national park city’ – is that a contradiction in terms?

This article was originally published in The Conversation on 24 July 2018. Header image via shutterstock The movement to declare London a national park city in 2019 is gaining momentum. Mayor Sadiq Khan recently launched National Park City Week, along with a series of outdoor activities to kick off the school holidays. Citizen groups and

11 05, 2018

Rewilding’s next generation will mean no more reserves full of starving animals

By |2019-07-20T10:34:09+00:00May 11th, 2018|Blog, Rewilding, Uncategorized|Comments Off on Rewilding’s next generation will mean no more reserves full of starving animals

This article was originally published in The Conversation on 11 May 2018. Header image via shutterstock In the late 1960s a patch of land to the east of Amsterdam was reclaimed from the sea for industry. Following the 1973 oil crisis this plan was abandoned and flocks of geese moved in. As the geese grazed

17 12, 2017

Alagoas curassow: generating identity value from a species asset

By |2017-12-17T00:11:10+00:00December 17th, 2017|21st Century conservation, Blog, Extinction, Natural Assets, People & nature, Protected Areas, Technology empowered conservation|Comments Off on Alagoas curassow: generating identity value from a species asset

It is a thoughtful moment looking into the eye of a bird that nearly went extinct.  As I crouched and observed an Alagoas curassow my first thought was a sense of deep gratitude to Pedro Mario Nardelli who in the late 1970s acted to rescue the last wild specimens and establish a captive population in

8 12, 2017

Brazil’s Cerrado forests won’t be saved by corporate pledges on deforestation

By |2019-07-20T10:37:25+00:00December 8th, 2017|Blog, Natural Assets, Uncategorized|Comments Off on Brazil’s Cerrado forests won’t be saved by corporate pledges on deforestation

This article by Sergio Carvalho and myself was published in The Conversation on 8 December 2017. Header image via www.shutterstock.com To the south of the Amazon basin lies a huge savannah known as the Cerrado. Once a mix of grassland and forest, much of the Cerrado has now been transformed into the vast soy farms

22 11, 2017

Photography is transforming British birdwatching

By |2017-11-22T21:15:04+00:00November 22nd, 2017|21st Century conservation, birdwatching, Blog, People & nature|Comments Off on Photography is transforming British birdwatching

This article was first published in British Birds on 15 August 2017 One Sunday last July I strolled down to the hide at RSPB Otmoor, one of my local birding patches in Oxfordshire. Five years ago I might have entered an empty hide. Not anymore. The place was packed with bird photographers, happily chatting as

3 09, 2017

Back from the brink, but what next for Lear’s macaw?

By |2017-09-03T16:56:23+00:00September 3rd, 2017|21st Century conservation, Blog, Conservation finance, Extinction, People & nature|Comments Off on Back from the brink, but what next for Lear’s macaw?

In December 1978 the famous Brazilian ornithologist Helmut Sick made one of the ornithological discoveries of the 20th century. He located a breeding population of the fabulous Lear’s macaw   – a species that had been known in collections for 150 years but whose whereabouts in the wild was a mystery. Lear’s macaw is one

15 07, 2017

Wild meat: rewilding and hunting

By |2017-07-15T14:18:50+00:00July 15th, 2017|21st Century conservation, Blog, Conservation Policy, Rewilding|Comments Off on Wild meat: rewilding and hunting

This article was published in Geographical Magazine on 15 June 2017 The idea of rewilding boar into the UK’s landscapes is gaining plenty of traction, but if we truly want them back we’ll need to consider hunting them as well.   Cycling through the Forest of Dean, my daughter and I encountered a sign instructing

21 05, 2017

Shooting for the Earth: Malta opti-hunt 2025

By |2017-05-21T17:46:49+00:00May 21st, 2017|21st Century conservation, Blog, Conservation Policy, Technology empowered conservation|Comments Off on Shooting for the Earth: Malta opti-hunt 2025

In 2012 I was invited by Cerry Levy to visit Malta with a group of artists seeking to offer new thinking on the campaign to stop springtime hunting on Matla.  Below is my contribution - an imaginary article in published in online newspaper in 2025. It offers a vision of a future Europe where opti-hunting is

16 05, 2017

Living landscapes as new natural assets

By |2017-05-16T17:24:27+00:00May 16th, 2017|21st Century conservation, Blog, Conservation finance, Conservation Policy, Naturalistic grazing, Rewilding, Uncategorized|Comments Off on Living landscapes as new natural assets

Good morning all, and thanks for the invitation to present today. Gary asked me to present some thoughts on new paradigms for conservation. My aim is to do just this. I will argue that we need to seize the opportunity of Brexit to reframe how we think and talk about rural lands. Brexit is a

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