logo
Rare hazel dormice released to create Leicestershire's only known population

Rare hazel dormice released to create Leicestershire's only known population

Glasgow Times12-06-2025

The tiny mammals were reintroduced this week to an undisclosed area of the Bradgate Park Trust estate by wildlife charity People's Trust for Endangered Species (PTES) and its partners.
A hazel dormouse is reintroduced in Leicestershire (PTES/PA)
It comes as part of national efforts to help the endangered species come back from the brink of extinction.
The native dormouse, immortalised as the sleepy guest at the Mad Hatter's Tea Party in Alice in Wonderland, has suffered declines of 70% nationally since 2000 and has vanished from 20 English counties.
Annual dormouse reintroductions began in 1993 and have been managed by PTES since 2000, with 1,142 being released into 26 different woodlands in 13 counties, including six English counties where they had previously been lost.
The reintroduction in Leicestershire follows the successful reintroduction of 38 dormice to the National Forest from the National Trust's Calke Abbey in Derbyshire.
The conservationists say this secondary reintroduction is a vital step forward for dormouse recovery nationally and regionally.
The hope is that these two populations of dormice will one day form part of a wider population spanning the whole forest.
A soft release cage filled with foliage, food and water (PTES/PA)
Bradgate Park Trust, which is a site of special scientific interest (SSSI) and part of a national nature reserve, was chosen with the help of local wildlife groups to ensure the woodland is suitable for dormice now and in the future.
Ian White, PTES dormouse and training officer, said: 'Despite once being a common part of Britain's woodlands and hedgerows, hazel dormice have experienced a historic and catastrophic decline due to habitat loss, degradation and poor management of woodlands and hedgerows, compounded by a changing climate.
'PTES's reintroductions, alongside habitat management, landscape projects and monitoring, are paramount to their long-term survival.'
James Dymond, director of Bradgate Park Trust, said: 'As a small charity, we are proud to be entrusted with the care of these rare and charming creatures.
'This reintroduction is a testament to the past woodland management efforts on the estate, and we are committed to ensuring this special habitat continues to thrive—not only for the dormice, but for a wide range of other rare species that call it home too.'
Health checks are carried out on Hazel dormice by the Disease Risk Analysis and Health Service team, inside the Vets hospital at ZSL London Zoo, as part of the reintroduction programme (David Levene/PA)
Ben Devine, head of nature recovery at the Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust, added: 'This release is an exciting first step in helping dormice not only locally, but nationally too.
'Ensuring the right landscape and habitat is in place is key to ensuring continued nature recovery, and we will continue to monitor the dormice to ensure that Leicestershire's only known population thrives and one day expands beyond Bradgate Park estate.'
The dormice are bred in captivity and undergo an eight-week quarantine with regular health checks before their release, to ensure only healthy animals are put into the wild.
They have been released into their woodland habitat, which has been selected to make sure it meets their needs, in large wire mesh cages with food and water.
Local volunteers from Bradgate Park Trust and the Leicestershire and Rutland Mammal Group will regularly check the cages and top up their food and water before the doors are opened after 10 days to allow them to start to explore their new home.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Urgent repairs under way at 15th Century Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk
Urgent repairs under way at 15th Century Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk

BBC News

time18 hours ago

  • BBC News

Urgent repairs under way at 15th Century Oxburgh Hall in Norfolk

An urgent conservation project is under way to preserve a manor house built more than 500 years levels in the moat at Oxburgh Hall, near Swaffham in Norfolk, became unusually low due to leaks last year and then a sinkhole appeared on a lawn.A watertight enclosure called a cofferdam has been installed to allow contractors to repair the moat as part of work costing £196, Baldwin from the National Trust said it was a "delicate balancing act" to keep water levels high enough to protect the building's walls without flooding the gardens. "If the water drops too low, the brickwork is exposed, which has an impact on the structural integrity of the hall itself," she said. Workers are expected to remain at the site until the end of June and will also repair the sluice and moat is fed via an underground channel from the River Gadder, with culverts allowing water in and out. The sluice gate controls the amount of water draining out of the moat and back to the Gadder. The Oxburgh Estate is owned by the National Trust but has been the family home of the Bedingfelds for more than 500 years, and they still live in private apartments at the hall. Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Middlesbrough's Ormesby Hall to fell trees due to ash dieback disease
Middlesbrough's Ormesby Hall to fell trees due to ash dieback disease

BBC News

timea day ago

  • BBC News

Middlesbrough's Ormesby Hall to fell trees due to ash dieback disease

Work will begin to fell a hundred trees suffering from ash dieback disease on a historic estate during nesting National Trust, which manages Ormesby Hall in Middlesbrough, was granted planning permission for the work to begin in January, but it was pushed back for an ecology assessment to be carried trust said it was satisfied with measures in place to protect wildlife and described how the trees potentially posed a risk to the public should they become too weak and disease is a fungus which infects ash trees, attacking leaves and branches, causing lesions, and eventually leading to their death. Mark Bradley, countryside manager with the National Trust, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) that "it was not ideal" to be carrying out the work during nesting said there was a benefit to carrying the work out during the drier season and that exclusion zones had been set up around nesting sites. "To manage risks, before we began the tree work, we assessed the site and considered what needed doing against the potential impacts on wildlife and the environment."We also do what we reasonably can to avoid disturbing or damaging birds' nests," he of the trees affected on the estate had been planted in Pennyman's Woods in the some older trees running along the nearby roadside, were probably more than 200 years old but would also have to come Bradley said: "As Europe's largest conservation charity, we take all our work of this nature extremely seriously and operate to what we believe are the highest standards."Our risk management of nest sites is above and beyond the norm." Follow BBC Tees on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

Welsh translation error on Abergavenny street name sign
Welsh translation error on Abergavenny street name sign

South Wales Argus

time2 days ago

  • South Wales Argus

Welsh translation error on Abergavenny street name sign

It's thought the mistranslated street nameplate had been in place for more than a decade when the error was picked up and reported to the local council. That saw the Welsh 'gwanwyn', meaning spring the season, placed on the nameplate alongside the English name Springfield Road. Monmouthshire County Council considered a complaint which was reported in its annual Welsh language standards and monitoring report covering April 2024 to March 2025. It stated: 'The word 'spring' had been mistranslated to reflect the season rather than a water source.' READ MORE: The council's Welsh language officer and the street naming and numbering officer investigated and following consultation with a translator, agreed on the corrected version 'Heol Cae'r Ffynnon.' The monitoring report said the nameplate will be corrected during the next round of nameplate updates. It stated: 'The original translation, made over a decade ago, predates current standards and no records exist explaining the initial decision for this translation. As a result, the council continues to strengthen its translation process through collaboration between officers and a dedicated translator, ensuring consistency and cultural sensitivity in all future street naming processes.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store