Front PageBusinessArtsCarsLifestyleFamilyTravelSportsSciTechNatureFiction
Search  
search
date/time
Sat, 6:00AM
few clouds
8.1°C
W 11mph
Sunrise7:16AM
Sunset5:24PM
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust
Wildlife Correspondents
@YorksWildlife
P.ublished 22nd December 2025
nature

2025 Wild Round-Up For Yorkshire Wildlife Trust

Pond at Askham Bog
Photo: ©Dave Powell
Pond at Askham Bog Photo: ©Dave Powell
It’s been another wild year for Yorkshire Wildlife Trust as we took ownership of and found some new species on our reserves, introduced new and innovative methods of looking after wild spaces, and advocated for nature’s protection.

Our events and activities inspired hope; from wildlife gardens and beach cleans to guided walks to watch puffins, school children learning about curlews, fungi forays at our annual festival, and drystone walling and wild flower walks in the foothills of Ingleborough. We’ve reached thousands of people and helped them witness Yorkshire’s wildlife at its finest and inspired many more to donate or join our 45,000-strong membership, our 1000-strong volunteers.

Dry stone walling at Ingleborough
Photo: © Dwayne Martindale
Dry stone walling at Ingleborough Photo: © Dwayne Martindale
This year also had its challenges, including the driest spring in Yorkshire for 132 years. This is a cause for concern for those of us caring for our wildlife and our nature reserves – particularly rare wetland habitats, which are at high risk from drying out and require preparation to adapt, restore and protect in a changing climate. A collision between two ships in the Humber Estuary in March happened just offshore from our highly-protected Spurn Point nature reserve; although ill effects were ultimately concentrated much further down the coast in Lincolnshire, the sheer vulnerability of wild places like the Humber Estuary as one of the most important and highly protected in the UK, has never been more evident.

The Trust is planning the 80th ‘oak’ anniversary in 2026 that will require and bring together committed collaboration to truly make a difference for Yorkshire’s wildlife, and its home, and drive the change that nature needs.

Park Gill nature reserve
Photo: ©Sara Spillett
Park Gill nature reserve Photo: ©Sara Spillett
Park Gill nature reserve – bringing temperate rainforest back to Yorkshire

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust’s 116th nature reserve just outside Grassington will form part of the Temperate Rainforest Restoration Programme, working in partnership with the Wildlife Trusts and Aviva to see temperate rainforests restored in areas where they used to grow along the damper, western climes of the British Isles.


Lady's Slipper Orchid 
Photo: ©Graham Standring
Lady's Slipper Orchid Photo: ©Graham Standring
Lady’s-slipper orchid success

A project team led by Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and supported by partners Natural England, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, the National Trust, Plantlife, and the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland (BSBI) were delighted to discover the first new lady’s-slipper orchid to appear in the wild for nearly 100 years. The orchid was collected to near-extinction in the UK in the early 20th century, with a single plant remaining in a hidden location in the Dales.


Ingleborough NNR (Southerscales nature reserve) 
Photo: ©David Berry
Ingleborough NNR (Southerscales nature reserve) Photo: ©David Berry
Ingleborough National Nature reserve is extended

Ingleborough National Nature Reserve (NNR) in the Yorkshire Dales grew to 1,186 hectares (2,930 acres) to honour its vital importance for nationally significant wildlife populations including the northern brown argus butterfly, curlew and Yorkshire sandwort. The expansion included five Yorkshire Wildlife Trust nature reserves and honours the vital work the Trust is doing in the area as part of its Wild Ingleborough programme. The Trust also restored 400m of dry stone wall– the same length as the Ribblehead Viaduct – across its Ingleborough reserves, thanks to the help of amazing volunteers.


Native flat oyster at Spurn 
Photo: © Finn Varney
Native flat oyster at Spurn Photo: © Finn Varney
Oysters in the Humber

Wilder Humber, delivered in partnership by Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust, achieved the largest release of native oysters in the intertidal zone by any restoration project in the UK to date. During 2025 the project has introduced 300,000 oysters with support from Ørsted, The Oyster Restoration Company, and the Fisheries and Seafood Scheme operated by the Marine Management Organisation.


Otter at North Cave Wetlands 
Photo: © Kay Sullivan
Otter at North Cave Wetlands Photo: © Kay Sullivan
New wild visitors at North Cave Wetlands

The Trust was absolutely delighted to announce its first-ever bittern breeding success at North Cave Wetlands nature reserve near Hull in July, as well as a clutch of pochard chicks and a regularly-visiting otter that wowed visitors. Bitterns were once so rare that there are still less than 20 breeding pairs in Yorkshire.


Robin Festival
Photo: ©Amy Cooper
Robin Festival Photo: ©Amy Cooper
Thousands go wild at our events and festivals

Alongside the Trust’s highly successful annual Puffin Festival at Flamborough and Fungi Festival at Potteric Carr in Doncaster, this year the Trust was delighted to welcome visitors through their doors for a new festival in December – Robin Festival. After a call was put out for knitted robins to create a trail, over 200 were received!


Starling murmuration at North Cave
Photo: ©Anne Howard Webb
Starling murmuration at North Cave Photo: ©Anne Howard Webb
Murmuration magic

This year has been particularly successful for starling murmurations, with sightings at Yorkshire Wildlife Trust’s Ripon City Wetlands, North Cave Wetlands, Potteric Carr and Spurn Point nature reserves. Murmurations will be visible until early February and are best just before dusk. More information and how to watch them here Starling murmurations | Yorkshire Wildlife Trust


RHS Wentworth Woodhouse 
Photo: ©Jo Rawson
RHS Wentworth Woodhouse Photo: ©Jo Rawson
Making our gardens wilder

The Trust responded to calls to help more people garden for wildlife at home and created a new Yorkshire Wildlife Trust Wildlife Gardening Award, the Trust’s first-ever Wildlife-Friendly Open Gardens and an exhibition at RHS Wentworth Woodhouse on hoverflies. Our wildlife gardening hub is packed with advice and information. Wildlife Gardening Hub | Yorkshire Wildlife Trust


Drought at Kilnsea Wetlands 
Photo: ©Lewis Outing
Drought at Kilnsea Wetlands Photo: ©Lewis Outing
Drought in Yorkshire and its impact on wildlife

Drought had an extensive impact across many of Yorkshire Wildlife Trust’s nature reserves this year. Vitally important wetland reserves like Kilnsea Wetlands and Askham Bog dried out entirely, causing damage to habitat that will take years to fix; many trees on woodland reserves lost limbs and turned autumnal early in an attempt to conserve water; and much of our wildlife like dragonflies and damselflies began to struggle.


The tanker collision in the North Sea

On 10th March, a container ship collided with a tanker around 13 nautical miles off the coast of Yorkshire Wildlife Trust’s Spurn Point National Nature Reserve. Although the impact on Yorkshire was minimal, Lincolnshire and Norfolk were inundated by melted plastic nurdles – small plastic pellets – washing up on their beaches. This is a clean up operation which could take months to years.


Himayalan balsam in Yorkshire 
Photo: © Simeon Gurr
Himayalan balsam in Yorkshire Photo: © Simeon Gurr
Tackling Himalayan balsam with rust fungus

Himalayan balsam is one of the UK’s most invasive weed species, and took Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and its volunteers 700 hours to remove from its sites this year. A new control method using a fungus native to the plant has shown early success, with the fungus surviving the cold Yorkshire winter.


Seawatching station Scarborough
Photo: ©Jules Lister
Seawatching station Scarborough Photo: ©Jules Lister
A new seawatching station in Scarborough

Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and art-science-climate organisation Invisible Dust were thrilled to unveil a new marine wildlife watching station on Marine Drive in April. The station is home to Roman Mosaic c. 2025, a permanent marine mosaic by Turner Prize-winning artist Jeremy Deller, as well as free seawatching telescopes and wildlife information panels.


Moorlands 
Photo: © Simon Tull
Moorlands Photo: © Simon Tull
70 years of Moorlands nature reserve

The Trust was delighted to celebrate the 70th anniversary of our Moorlands nature reserve in York in September. The reserve is very popular with families for its treehouse and trails, and is home to rhododendrons and azaleas, and a huge array of fungi.