A new report published today by The Wildlife Trusts reveals that society must help nature adapt to the climate crisis and be prepared to see wild places change in order to survive.
The Wildlife Trusts’ first climate risk assessment, Changing Nature, examines the impacts of the changing climate across their estate, which covers nearly 400 square miles of wild space - including our 42 precious nature reserves. The report assesses the risks and looks ahead at what is needed to help nature adapt and survive in the future. The findings come at a time when the UK is already one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world.
This new research finds that, by the 2050s, under a future warming trajectory that reaches 3°C warming by 2100:
- Half of The Wildlife Trusts’ nature reserves will have 30+ days of very high fire risk yearly.
- Almost all reserves will see more than 1°C increase on hot summer days by 2050.
- 55 per cent of reserves will see nearby river flows drop by more than 30 per cent during times of low flow.
The report also shows how extreme weather is already affecting many Wildlife Trust nature reserves, including:
- Wildfires – have destroyed valuable and rare habitats, affecting the availability of food for wildlife and costing huge amounts of time and money.
- Flooding – has impacted wildlife, damaged infrastructure and increased river pollution.
- Droughts – have lowered the water table on wetland nature reserves, dried out chalk streams and peat bogs, and concentrated pollution in rivers.