Endangered wildlife appeal
Woodland wildlife is fading before our eyes. Please support our appeal to save rare and threatened species.
Donate nowWoods and trees are home to more wildlife than any other landscape, providing homes for thousands of species including our most loved animals.
Trees woods and wildlife
Explore UK mammals and get our tips on how to identify them, where to see them and why they're important.
Trees woods and wildlife
With declining woodland bird populations, protecting woodland habitats is more important than ever, from the lush canopy to the leaf litter below.
Trees woods and wildlife
Look out for these cold-blooded creatures along woodland edges, glades, ditches and ponds. Woods are ideal for hunting and breeding, while crevices, burrows, logs and leaf litter offer perfect winter shelter.
Trees woods and wildlife
With secretive habits and intriguing lifecycles, fish like salmon, trout and lamprey rely on woodland streams and rivers. These shady and fast-flowing watery habitats are a vital part of their survival.
Trees woods and wildlife
Woodland butterflies are some of the most thrilling and colourful woodland animals. But with a 55% decrease between 1999 and 2015, protecting and increasing their woodland habitats is more important than ever.
Trees woods and wildlife
While they may not be seen as quite as attractive as butterflies, moths have a beauty all of their own. A whole host of moth species live in woodland, using their camouflage skills to blend in with tree bark, leaves and other woodland features. There are over 2,500 species of moth in the UK.
Trees woods and wildlife
There are 4,000 recorded species of beetle in Britain, and more than 1,000 live in trees and woodland habitats.
Trees woods and wildlife
Bugs are common woodland residents, with their piercing and sucking mouth parts, which sets them apart from their beetle relatives.
Trees woods and wildlife
Bees, wasps and ants all form part of the insect order Hymenoptera, a large and diverse group made up of 'membrane-winged' insects.
Trees woods and wildlife
They might not be the UK's most loved animal, but spiders are pretty special with some species thriving in woodland habitats.
Trees woods and wildlife
Slugs and snails are key parts of the woodland ecosystem, providing food for many.
Trees woods and wildlife
Whether they're chirruping in the tree tops or jumping around on the forest floor, many crickets and grasshoppers are found in woodland.
Trees woods and wildlife
Centipedes and millipedes are many-legged recycling machines, often thriving on the woodland floor.
Trees woods and wildlife
Woodlice are land-based crustaceans and industrious nutrient recyclers and look under any rock or stump and they'll be there!
Trees woods and wildlife
The UK is home to a number of different species of true fly, including craneflies, robber-flies, bee-flies, hoverflies and mosquitoes, as well as the more distantly related caddisflies.
Trees woods and wildlife
Woodland supports thousands, probably millions, of insects and invertebrates that live among the leaves, under bark, in dead wood and on the woodland floor.
Trees woods and wildlife
The UK is home to 18 species of bat. The only mammals that can fly, they also sleep upside down, navigate by echolocation and find food and shelter in woods and trees.
Woodland wildlife is fading before our eyes. Please support our appeal to save rare and threatened species.
Donate nowWildlife is all around us, from sights and sounds to tracks and trails. Discover what's out there all year round with our identification guides.
See our easy ID guides