
Researcher records Cooper’s hawk in New Jersey making use of pedestrian crossing and line of cars while hunting

Researcher records Cooper’s hawk in New Jersey making use of pedestrian crossing and line of cars while hunting
t is a tactic worthy of Tom Cruise’s Ethan Hunt: wait until a beeping pedestrian crossing indicates a traffic queue has formed then use the line of cars as cover to reach your target. But this isn’t a scene from Mission: Impossible – it’s the behaviour of a young hawk.
The discovery is not the first time birds have been found to make use of an urban environment. Crows, for example, are known to drop foods such as walnuts on to roads for cars to crush them open.
However, the researcher behind a new study says it is the most advanced case so far of raptors making use of traffic patterns.
Osprey watchers are being treated to a rarely seen - and possibly never before captured on film – polygamy saga playing out at a nest in the Tweed Valley.
Forestry and land Scotland (FLS) cameras are capturing in real time the fascinating behaviour of two female ospreys and one male who have set up a home as a trio – a form of polygamy known as polygyny with a male breeding with multiple females.
The cameras set up as part of The Tweed Valley Osprey Project are providing a fascinating insight into the natural behaviour between the adult birds – Mrs O, a female who has previously nested at the site and a new female and young male – as the partnership and nesting behaviour develops during the season.
Conservationists say part of bill allowing developers to avoid environmental laws by paying into nature fund should be ditched
Leading wildlife charities are calling on Labour to scrap a significant section of the planning bill that they say is a “licence to kill nature”, as new data reveals bats and newts are not the main reason planning is delayed in England.
The RSPB and the Wildlife Trusts, whose membership is more than 2 million, said Labour had broken its promises on nature. They called for part three of the bill, which allows developers to avoid environmental laws at a site by paying into a national nature recovery fund to pay for environmental improvements elsewhere, to be ditched.
Beccy Speight, CEO of the RSPB, said: “It’s now clear that the bill in its current form will rip the heart out of environmental protections and risks sending nature further into freefall.
Scientists warn of profound impacts as sea temperatures rise by up to 4C above average for springtime
The sea off the coast of the UK and Ireland is experiencing an unprecedented marine heatwave with temperatures increasing by as much as 4C above average for the spring in some areas.
Marine biologists say the intensity and unprecedented nature of the rise in water temperatures off the coasts of Devon, Cornwall and the west coast of Ireland are very concerning. As human-induced climate breakdown continues to raise global temperatures, the frequency of marine heatwaves is increasing.
“This is unprecedented because it is happening so early in the year,” said Dr Manuela Truebano, from the school of biological and marine sciences at the University of Plymouth. “To see these temperature rises around UK waters at this time of year is quite sobering. Each time it happens we use the word ‘unprecedented’, and I am very concerned at the increase in prevalence and intensity of these marine heatwave events.”
I grew up near Slut's Hole Lane. It didn't have a sign at the time and I only found the name on an old map, but the sign has been put back since.
More recently a regular walk would take me past a woodland called Fiscal Policy. I did find an explanation for this one. I can't recall the details, but it was rather dull overall.
Mussel samples are a yardstick for coastal water quality. But with mussel numbers in decline, scientists are inventing new ways to sample waters.
Mussels are one of nature’s yardsticks for coastal water quality, and they even help filter it. But with mussel numbers declining from Western Europe to the Arctic due to climate change, Environment Agency scientists are exploring new ways to sample water.
Each spring, Environment Agency officers collect samples of Atlantic Blue Mussels (Mytilus edulis) from the Camel estuary in Cornwall as part of their routine water quality monitoring. The Camel is one of around twenty sites in a national network.
The mussel flesh is removed from the mussels and then sent to the Environment Agency laboratories at Starcross and Leeds where it is analysed for a range of chemical contaminants found in the shellfish.
A Senedd Committee says that it is ‘gravely concerned’ at Natural Resources Wales’ plan to reduce the number of low category pollution incidents it responds to.
A Senedd Committee says that it is ‘gravely concerned’ at Natural Resources Wales’ (NRW) plan to reduce the number of low category pollution incidents it responds to.
The Climate Change, Environment and Infrastructure Committee’s annual scrutiny of the environmental watchdog highlights several concerning aspects of how it plans to keep an eye on things like fly-tipping, illegal chemical dumping and water pollution.
NRW’s new plan is to focus on larger incidents and to adopt a “higher tolerance of risk” in how they manage reports of pollution in Wales.
It is not a frosty winter's morning or a Halloween scene, but a creation caused by caterpillars.
You would be fooled for thinking it is a frosty winter's morning or a Halloween scene, but a once-in-a-year phenomenon that puts a covering of white across trees, bushes and hedgerows is actually down to thousands of caterpillars.
The white webbing has been seen across the East of England this May, and is created on host plants by the larvae who protect themselves from predators before they turn into moths or butterflies.
East Anglian-based entomologist, Dr Ian Bedford, said: "Inside that net blanket is thousands and thousands of little caterpillars all munching on the leaves.
Case came to supreme court after court of appeal determined the term ‘open-air recreation’ included camping
Wild camping will be allowed on Dartmoor after the supreme court ruled that a multimillionaire landowner was wrong to ban it on his land.
Dartmoor was – until the legal action – the only place in England where wild camping without the permission of the landowner was enshrined in law. In Scotland, people have enjoyed this right since 2003.
For two years, Alexander Darwall, a multimillionaire hedge fund manager, has been pursuing the matter through the courts against the Dartmoor National Park Authority (DNPA), as he does not want people camping on his land without his permission.
A new initiative aimed at tackling the deepening environmental crisis in Wales is gaining momentum, as conservationists rally public support to launch a pioneering Nature Investigations Unit.
The project, developed by the Initiative for Nature Conservation Cymru (INCC), seeks to hold environmental decision-makers to account and reverse the alarming decline of wildlife and habitats across the country.
The proposed unit will bring together a team of experienced journalists, campaigners, and researchers tasked with investigating the root causes of nature’s decline in Wales. Their work will focus on exposing harmful policies, challenging inaction, and proposing evidence-based solutions to restore biodiversity and protect the natural environment.
Solway Coast National Landscape says the damage caused to Silloth Dunes is "horrifying".
Sand dunes badly damaged in a fire could take years to recover, experts have said.
Naomi Kay, manager of Solway Coast National Landscape, said the damage caused to an area of Silloth Dunes at the weekend - roughly the size of two football pitches - was "horrifying" and had destroyed wildlife habitats.
Cumbria Fire and Rescue Service said it was still investigating the cause of the blaze but warned people of the risk of barbecues and camping stoves in the countryside.
The Shallowford Farm Trust is helping restore an ecologically important area of marshy grassland.
A Devon charity has been awarded a large grant to help protect and restore an ecologically important area of marshy grassland.
The Shallowford Farm Trust on Dartmoor provides children from inner-city areas with the chance to experience life on East Shallowford Farm.
The trust has secured a grant of £227,166 from the Heritage Lottery Fund to safeguard and restore its rare rhos pasture habitat - a wet grassland ecosystem characterised by purple moor grass and rushes.
The Ulster Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals says it has received calls from concerned members of the public.
A rare sighting of a white stork has caught people's attention in various parts of Northern Ireland.
The Ulster Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (USPCA) posted on Facebook that it had received "numerous calls from concerned members of the public regarding an "injured stork over the past two days".
It seems the bird was spotted in Botanic Gardens, Belfast, parts of Downpatrick in County Down and even in Donegal.
ZSL Vets give tiny dormice green light head of wild release
Our wildlife vets have given nine rare hazel dormice the all-clear, ahead of the tiny rodent’s release into the wild next month.
The dormice – including three born at Whipsnade Zoo - each received a health screening from our Disease Risk Analysis and Health Surveillance Team (DRAHS), as part of ongoing national conservation efforts to recover populations of this vulnerable mammal, which was once widespread across England and Wales.
During the 10-minute-long health checks, the fluffy-tailed dormice were placed under general anaesthetic so that the team of vets could gently check the heart and lungs of each dormouse, before carefully looking over their eyes, ears, nose, teeth and fur, to ensure the animals are ready for release. Each mouse was fitted with a microchip to help conservationists accurately identify individuals during follow-up monitoring, when they check how the dormice are doing in their new woodland home.
Right handed. My wallet is in my left pocket, since anything that I need to do with it will involve holding it with my left and doing the thing with my right.
Both my phones (home and work) are in my right, since I can carry out basic functions on them one handed.
It sounds like this is the page that you want.
A farmer near Wadebridge welcomes eight chicks as part of a project to reintroduce the species.
A farmer is nurturing a brood of white stork chicks as part of a charity's aim to reintroduce them in the county.
Yan Swiderski has welcomed eight stork chicks from the adults he keeps in a woodland near Wadebridge as part of work by the Cornwall Stork Project.
Wildlife expert Chris Packham said the project was "exciting" as it would "hopefully recolonise Cornwall" with the birds.
28 environmental charities have served a spoof planning notice to MPs, warning that the Planning & Infrastructure Bill is an application to demolish wildlife
An Official Statistics Publication for Scotland: The Proportion of Scotland's Protected Sites in Favourable Condition 2025
The main findings show that, as of 31 March 2025, 75.2% of Scotland’s natural features on protected nature sites are either in, or recovering towards, a favourable condition. This figure represents a 3.8 percentage point increase since the baseline in 2005. There is a 0.3 percentage point decrease since last year.
(A difference of less than +/-1 percentage point from last year's figure suggests that the position is more likely to be maintaining than showing any change.)
The report draws on annual monitoring carried out by NatureScot of the condition of the 5,603 natural features across Scotland. As of 31 March 2025, 5,433 natural features were assessed and divided into three categories: habitats such as grasslands, woodlands and uplands (72.7% in favourable condition), species such as the evidence of seabirds breeding, presence of freshwater pearl mussels and number of vascular plant populations (72.5% in favourable condition) and earth sciences such as geographical outcrops and la
A dog-walker was amazed to see the marine animal swimming down the River Usk
A rare and unexpected sighting has been reported of what appears to be a dolphin or a porpoise swimming in the River Usk in Newport.
This unusual occurrence has captured the attention of local residents and wildlife enthusiasts alike. The River Usk is known for its diverse wildlife, including salmon, trout, otters, and various bird species, but sightings of dolphins or any mammals are exceedingly rare – especially in Newport city centre.
The animal was captured by a local dog-walker, walking on the cycle track between Shaftesbury and Caerleon, and has been shared to social media where locals say the animal had been spotted by many as it made its way down the river.
Not since the early '80s.
Anglers say more than a third of freshwater sites breach phosphate levels for good ecological status
Citizen testing of rivers in England and Wales by anglers reveals that more than a third of freshwater sites breach phosphate levels for good ecological status.
Volunteers from angling groups are using the data to try to drive change in the way rivers are treated – but the task ahead is huge, according to the Angling Trust and Fish Legal.
“Our freshwater habitats are in crisis – a fact now widely recognised by the public, politicians and regulators,” the chief executive, Jamie Cook, said. “Many anglers already knew this, having witnessed the decline in water quality at our favourite fishing spots.
It is hoped edible glitter could help conservationists to track the shy species in the wild.
Endangered water voles in Wales are being fed edible glitter in a bid to save them from extinction.
Once commonly found across south Wales, water voles are now effectively extinct in all but a few locations, according to the Wildlife Trust.
With their future hanging in the balance, conservationists have been looking for new ways to track the naturally shy individuals in the wild - which is where the glitter comes in.
Scientists warn rising sea levels could push important freshwater tidal areas up against man-made barriers such as weirs.
Estuaries across England and Wales are at risk of losing important habitat as it is “squeezed” out by rising seas and human development, a study warns.
Estuaries are key for wildlife such as wading birds, as breeding and nursery grounds for commercially important fish, and for storing carbon and improving water quality by filtering nutrients, contaminants and sediment.
However, a combination of rising seas and lower summer river levels as a result of climate change, and man-made barriers such as weirs and dams are putting freshwater habitat at the top of estuaries at risk, according to scientists who have previously coined the phenomenon “estuarine squeeze”.
It's the end of a fortnight's holiday for me, so I'm driving home tomorrow, followed by pizza and undemanding tv comedy when I get home to my wife. I have missed her a lot.
On Sunday there are some post-holiday logistics and chores to sort out, but we'll have lunch out and probably play Gloom in the evening: a card game that one of the friends with whom I am on holiday introduced me to. I ordered a set myself after the first game.
Yes. Why do you ask?
Ha, yes. They have now updated the photos. I imagine that there were quite a few people pointing this out to them.
The photos that the Independent are using at North American elk - Cervus canadensis. However, the species that they are actually looking to introduce are Aces alces - Eurasian elk, which are what North Americans know as moose.
The Guardian did get this right a few days back.
ETA: they have now corrected the photos.
I think that it does improve after ep1, but we still abandoned it after around 4 eps. There was still nothing compelling or that added to the overall Duniverse.
Not specifically for the eyes or posture, but for overall approach and attitude to situations like this:
Just finished Adrian Tchaikovsky's Shroud, after a bit of delay in the middle. Some good world-building and interesting concepts, and an engaging tale - but not quite up with Children of Time, I'd say.
About a third of the way through Iain M Banks' Use of Weapons. It seems too focused on the flashbacks - which have not coalesced into a cohesive whole so far. There is still plenty of time, of course.
Comments like that say far more about the person saying it than about the person being described most of the time, I'd say.
I'd need to know how good the describer is like in that area before I could make any assessment about the describee.
Yes. This is one of his Culture novels. I've been enjoying them so far.
The run up to a fortnight of holiday for me, so the days were simultaneously dragging and full of stuff that I was trying to get finished or progressed as much as possible.
However, now I am dozing in the sun with the requisite amounts of clotted cream and cider and a stack of books (Banks' Use of Weapons at the moment).
Once the BH crowds have thinned, I will probably get out for some coastal hikes too.
Very little is grabbing me right now. Probably only The Phoenician Scheme really.
I had a nap yesterday afternoon, which is probably the first for several months. However, I am on holiday for a couple of weeks now, so will probably be having more over that time.
Pizza, cheesecake, wife's puppy eyes,
Shadow (2018) - beautifully designed and shot, particularly in the first half. Relatively gory for a wuxia: I didn't mind but my wife, who is quite sensitive to such things, found it too much at times.
As with Zhang Yimou's earlier House of Flying Daggers I felt that that it didn't really reach a conclusion as much as ended the story and then drifted to a stop.
Definitely worth seeing though.
No. I'm not interested in interaction when I am buying or selling something. Nor playing games, or getting or giving social strokes or whatever. I will do that on separate occasions.
I will pay the price asked or I will look elsewhere.
I don't drink either - or any other hot drinks. I have never liked them.
There was a while when, every other year or so, in the depths of winter, I would get it into my head that my tastes might have changed and would accept someone's offer of something: tea, coffee, hot chocolate or whatever. But I'd always end up taking one sip and realise my folly.
And, no, Iced tea or similar does nothing for me either.