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The Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts (RSWT) is an independent charity, [2] with a membership formed of the 46 individual charitable Trusts. It acts as an umbrella group for the individual Wildlife Trusts, as well as operating a separate Grants Unit which administers a number of funds. King Charles III serves as the patron of the Wildlife Trusts ...
The Rivers Trust; Royal Forestry Society; Royal Horticultural Society; RSPB (Royal Society for the Protection of Birds) Scottish Wildlife Trust; Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings; Soil Association; Stop Climate Chaos; Sustrans; The Tree Register; The Civic Trust; The Corner House; The Institution of Environmental Sciences; The ...
The term wildlife trust can be used in one of two senses to describe organisations concerned with wildlife: in a specific sense, to refer to the Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts in the United Kingdom, or one of its constituent members known as The Wildlife Trusts ; a list of these can be found at that page.
Cooper's Hill (The Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire) Cop Lane (The Wildlife Trust for Lancashire, Manchester & north Merseyside) Cople Pits (The Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Northamptonshire) Copperas Wood (Essex Wildlife Trust) Copythorne Common (Hampshire & IOW Wildlife Trust)
The Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust is the Gloucestershire local partner in a conservation network of 46 Wildlife Trusts. The Wildlife Trusts are local charities with the specific aim of protecting the United Kingdom's natural heritage.
The Scottish Wildlife Trust is a leading voluntary conservation organisation, working to protect Scotland's natural environment. The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland is a learned society and registered charity that maintains Edinburgh Zoo and the Highland Wildlife Park (a safari park and zoo near Kingussie, which specialises in native fauna ...
The trust was founded in 1946 by the ornithologist and artist Sir Peter Scott as the Severn Wildfowl Trust. The first site at Slimbridge was a centre for research and conservation. In a move unusual at the time, he opened the site to the public so that everyone could enjoy access to nature.
The Norfolk Wildlife Trust (NWT) is one of 46 wildlife trusts covering Great Britain, Northern Ireland, Isle of Man and Alderney. [1] Founded in 1926, it is the oldest of all the trusts. It has over 35,500 members and eight local groups and it manages more than fifty nature reserves and other protected sites.