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The Scottish Wildlife Trust acquired its first wildlife reserve in 1966 and now has more than 120 reserves throughout Scotland with visitor centres at Loch of the Lowes (Perth and Kinross), Montrose Basin (Angus), and the Falls of Clyde (South Lanarkshire). As well as providing homes for wildlife these sites are valuable places for people to ...
Belmaduthy Dam (Scottish Wildlife Trust) Beltingham River Gravels (Northumberland Wildlife Trust) Bemersyde Moss (Scottish Wildlife Trust) Ben Mor Coigach (Scottish Wildlife Trust) Bentinick Banks (Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust) Bernwood Meadows (Berks, Bucks & Oxon Wildlife Trust) Berry Wood (The Wildlife Trust for South & West Wales)
The Scottish Wildlife Trust have designated part of the park as a 'Wildlife Site' through an agreement with the local council. The site is of 47 ha, with 6 ha of that being woodland. The map reference is NS 327 427, and the area covers Chapelholms Woods and the wetland associated with Eglinton Loch.
The basin is protected by a number of designations; it is managed by the Scottish Wildlife Trust as a Wildlife Reserve, [3] as well as being designated as a Local Nature Reserve, [4] Site of Special Scientific Interest, [2] a Special Protection Area [5] and a Ramsar Site. [1]
The Clyde Valley Woodlands National Nature Reserve (NNR) comprises six separate woodland sites in the Clyde Valley region of South Lanarkshire, Scotland.These six sites are located along a 12 km section of the River Clyde and its tributaries, and lie close to built-up areas such as Hamilton and Lanark on the southern outskirts of Greater Glasgow.
And Scottish Wildlife Trust completed its snorkel trail network with two final routes in Orkney, meaning there are now 13 trails to help snorkelling wildlife-lovers explore Scotland’s seas.
Hoselaw Loch and Din Moss is a nature reserve near Kelso in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, in the former Roxburghshire. A lack of footpaths and the surrounding land being used by farms makes access tricky.
Between 1985 and 2010 the Scottish Wildlife Trust (SWT) managed Coul Links under an agreement with the landowner, however the agreement was not renewed when it expired. The SWT continues to be involved in the management of the adjacent Loch Fleet NNR.