© Shutterstock European bison Through grazing, foraging, wallowing and trampling, the hefty bison boosts habitat diversification
© Kevin Pluk / Shutterstock Aurochs (cow) Europe’s original wild cattle, the huge aurochs would have fundamentally influenced the shape of Britain’s landscapes
© Knepp Knepp Castle Estate Knepp Estate is the inspirational rewilding project thats turned a failing farm land into a profitable site of wildlife abundance in West Sussex.
© Wild Ken Hill Wild Ken Hill Wild Ken Hill in Norfolk is combining rewilding and regenerative agriculture for nature recovery and showing land can be used to mitigate climate change
© Broughton Estate Yorkshire Rewilding Network The Yorkshire Rewilding Network launched in 2020. Its aim is to promote local rewilding action and restore wildlife.
© Philip Price / scotlandbigpicture.com Beavers: getting ready to make a return from extinction Absent for centuries, beavers are set to return to the Norfolk countryside at Wild Ken Hill. Learn about this exciting project and it’s new eco engineers
© Philip Price / scotlandbigpicture.com Eurasian beaver Nature’s busy aquatic architect is a formidable tree feller, river changer and wetland creator
© Pino Magliani / Shutterstock Extinction? Re-pelican. Read our interview with the author Benedict Macdonald as he discusses his new book Rebirding: Rewilding Britain and its Birds.