Mountain bumblebee

Biodiversity action in our National Parks

From freshwater pearl mussels to dormice, lapwings to barbastelle bats, National Parks are home to a diverse range of wildlife.

Protecting the biodiversity found in our family of 15 National Parks is an important part of what we do.

New decade of biodiversity

2010 was the International Year of Biodiversity, and many parks ran special schemes and projects to help protect or re-establish rare species last year.

Now the UN has declared a 'new decade of biodiversity', which runs until 2020, and the hard work being carried out in our Parks goes on.

Success stories

Here's a snapshot of some of the species, plants and places our family of National Parks help to protect.

Biodiversity: the web of life

Biological diversity - or biodiversity - is the name we give to the variety of life on our planet, the result of billions of years of evolution. It is the web of life - and we're an integral part of it.

So far, scientists have identified about 1.75 million species, mostly small creatures such as insects. In total there are probably more like 13 million species, though estimates range from three to 100 million.

As well as plants, animals and micro-organisms, biodiversity also includes genetic differences within each species - for example, different crop varieties and breeds of livestock.

Biodiversity also means the ecosystems in our deserts, forests, wetlands, mountains, lakes, rivers and agricultural landscapes.

Why is biodiversity under threat?

In a word: humans. The loss of species has always occurred but the pace of extinction has accelerated dramatically as a result of human activity.

Based on current trends, an estimated 34,000 plant and 5,200 animal species - including one in eight of the world's bird species - face extinction.

The threats to species and ecosystems include:

Biodiversity matters because...?

We're a part of it - and we can't live without it.

Most of the oxygen we breathe comes from plankton in our oceans and the forests around the globe.

The fruit and vegetables we eat have been pollinated by bees. The water we drink is part of a huge global cycle involving clouds, rainfall, glaciers, rivers and oceans.

Our diet depends almost entirely on the plants and animals around us - from the grasses that give us rice and wheat, to the fish and meat from both wild and farmed landscapes.

If that's not enough to make us stop and think, the natural world also supplies us with:

www.biodiversityislife.net/whyitmatters

Want more information on biodiversity?

  • www.int/2010/biodiversity
  • www.int/2010/losingbiodiversity
  • www.biodiversityislife.net
  • www.biodiversityislife.net/success-stories

looking after

Ospreys return to England

Osprey on branch

A Lake District National Park project, working with the RSPB and Forestry Commission has brought back breeding Ospreys to England - not seen since the 1830s