A quick post to let you know that the new Nature UK blog and website are now up and running. We won't be posting here any more (but you can still comment for a bit longer) so please make sure you follow us on the new one. We're pretty excited about the new possibilities it will bring. Hope you are too!
Exciting news... next week the Springwatch/Autumnwatch team, in conjunction with our friends and colleagues in the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Natural History Unit, will be launching Nature UK, a brand new blog and website for UK nature lovers that will run all year round.
Read the rest of this entry
Just a few weeks to go until the live show and your pictures are really flooding in to the ! Now that we're gearing up for the Springwatch Photo Club it's more important than ever that you share your spectacular signs of spring with us, so that we can put together the strongest and most sensational show of your work.
Read the rest of this entry
Unsprung is back!
Now with its own slot on ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳2, for half an hour every Friday night during Springwatch, Martin will host the weekly edition of our audience-led show. He'll be discussing the week's biggest events and talking points, tackling your questions, following your debates, and of course, keeping us on our toes with special guests and mystery items.
Read the rest of this entry
Chris will be out and about meeting pioneering scientists and members of the public who have had amazing revelations about our animals, all thanks to their passion and persistence with the natural world. Bringing science to you through clear and simple geek speak!
Read the rest of this entry
After his amazing success finding and filming killer whales in the North Sea during Autumnwatch, intrepid wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan is on the road again for Springwatch 2010.
Read the rest of this entry
With so many great anecdotes and stories coming into the Springwatch office direct from our viewers, Martin will be following up on some of these leads and travelling around the country to meet the audience and share your wildlife experiences first hand.
Read the rest of this entry
In this, the International Year of Biodiversity, Simon will be based in Britain's secret and sunny wilderness where he'll be using his incredible field craft skills and hi-tech equipment to share the treasures of this amazingly wildlife-rich region.
Read the rest of this entry
Chris and Kate will be on hand to monitor our daily animal dramas as they unfold at our North Norfolk wildlife hotspot.
Read the rest of this entry
Springwatch is back! Once again, we'll be celebrating the best of the UK's wildlife, bringing you all the news, views and action from across the country live, and as it happens. And we're hoping you'll join in and get involved as in previous years - your input makes the Springwatch season all the more special and rewarding for us.
Read the rest of this entry
Fill up your glasses, put on your thinking caps, and settle down for the unique Springwatch Pub Quiz! There's nothing else like it on TV...
Read the rest of this entry
There are a couple of rather exciting additions to Springwatch this year and I'm particularly pleased about Springwatch Photo Club. You may remember I've always felt we don't devote enough time to the amazing photographs you post on . The new Photo Club will go some way to addressing this.
Read the rest of this entry
To get you in the ladybird spotting frame of mind, Dr Helen Roy from the and Peter Brown from the have helped us put together a ladybird quiz. Let's see how much you know about this dappled garden visitor.
You can find the ladybird quiz answers on the new Nature UK blog. Good luck!
Read the rest of this entry
If like us, you blinked and the last two weeks have become a distant memory you will be forgiven for not noticing the sleepy emergence of one of our most loved garden insects. What started off as a few singular office sightings has now developed into a spot-spotting frenzy. Ladybirds are everywhere.
But our , with sightings of the five-spot becoming rarer and rarer. This is partly due to the arrival in the UK of the invasive . Originally from Asia, the harlequin from mainland Europe where it's routinely used in agriculture to control aphid populations. Unfortunately for our native ladybirds the harlequin is a more generalised feeder and is able to reproduce continuously throughout spring, summer and autumn, allowing its populations to grow steadily in size.
Read the rest of this entry