A trust responsible for protecting wildlife in Oxfordshire has today launched its biggest ever fundraising appeal to tackle the nature and climate crisis locally.

The Berkshire, Buckinghamshire & Oxfordshire Wildlife Trust (BBOWT) has set up a Nature Recovery Fund which aims to raise £3m in three years to help bring wildlife back, and benefit climate and people.

The urgent appeal follows the publication of the State of Nature 2023 report, which found one in six British species at risk of extinction, with birds, amphibians and reptiles under most threat.

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Experts have warned habitat loss, climate change, pollution, intensive agriculture, housing developments and infrastructure projects, such as HS2, are impacting hugely on local nature in Oxfordshire and surrounding counties. 

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Estelle Bailey, chief executive of BBOWT, said: “Wildlife in our three counties is disappearing fast - butterflies, wildflowers, hedgehogs, birds, frogs, bees - it’s shocking.

“Unsustainable development and intensive farming are wiping wildlife off the map right here on our own doorsteps, and our climate is in chaos.

“We all need nature, for food, fresh air and water, and for our own wellbeing. And we know we can’t fix the climate crisis without restoring nature, the two go together.

“The choice is clear: no nature, no future, no us. But it’s not too late. Our Nature Recovery Fund will help create more nature everywhere, which is good for climate and people in our three counties too. But we all need to do our bit, urgently.”

The UK is one of the worst countries in the world for wildlife, with only 53 per cent of its biodiversity left.

The Nature Recovery Fund will target three critical areas of BBOWT’s work – nature, climate and people.

The Trust hopes the fund will help protect more land to bring nature back, restore more woodland and floodplain to guard against climate change, and inspire communities and young people to care for wildlife.

It could enable the Trust to work with more landowners, local charities, councils and farmers, to put nature’s recovery first.

The appeal has been backed by life-long nature lover, wildlife presenter, Berkshire resident and BBOWT president Steve Backshall, who said: “We are lucky enough to have otters, kingfishers and a whole array of aquatic bird and invertebrate life appearing across Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, and Oxfordshire every day.

Oxford Mail: Steve Backshall

“This is a part of the world I treasure, but we all have a responsibility to look after it.

"Sadly, the nature we know, and love is under serious threat - the call of the wild is being silenced.

“That's why BBOWT is launching its biggest ever appeal with an ambitious goal. We want to bring nature back - it's that simple.

“In our countryside, our towns, and our villages - we want to give nature a fighting chance. But we can't do that on our own - we need your help. Nature is sending us an SOS - will you answer the call?”

BBOWT has more than 80 nature reserves, 150 staff and some 1,700 volunteers. It’s aiming for 30 per cent of land across the three counties to be well managed for wildlife by 2030 and said it needs as many people as possible to join the fight to achieve that.

Money raised by the Nature Recovery Fund will give the Trust the eco-boost it needs to fast-track nature’s recovery.

The Nature Recovery Fund has got off to a flying start, with £160,000 already pledged by some of BBOWT’s most valued and long-standing donors – but the Trust said there is still a long way to go and every donation counts, however big or small.

You can do your bit to help bring nature back by giving to the Nature Recovery Fund today at www.bbowt.org.uk/nrf.

You can also donate by texting RECOVERY followed by your donation amount to 70480*.

 

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This story was written by Matthew Norman, he joined the team in 2022 as a Facebook community reporter.

Matthew covers Bicester and focuses on finding stories from diverse communities.

Get in touch with him by emailing: Matthew.norman@newsquest.co.uk

Follow him on Twitter: @OxMailMattN1