The rapid decline of the red squirrel in Britain is continuing, the 'UK Biodiversity Action Plan' report warns. AP

By Michael McCarthy, Environment Editor
Saturday, 22 May 2010 A report showing that Britain is failing to halt the declines of many of its highest-priority wildlife species and habitats, from the red squirrel, the juniper and the common skate to chalk rivers and coastal salt marshes, was “sneaked out” this week by the Government with no publicity, environmental campaign groups said yesterday. More than twice as many conservation priority species and habitats are declining as are increasing across the UK, the report says, yet to find that study is virtually impossible without special knowledge. It was posted on the website of the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC), the Government’s UK-wide wildlife advisers, on Thursday. But it is buried deep in the site, there was no press release, and there is no reference to it or link to it on the website’s front page. It is not even on the website of the relevant Government department, the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra). The report – The UK Biodiversity Action Plan: highlights from the 2008 reporting round [pdf] – was finished more than a year ago, and wildlife campaign groups have accused the previous Labour government of deliberately sitting on it, and the new Conservative-Lib Dem coalition Government of actively seeking to hide it. It concerns the progress – or lack of it – of the 500-plus UK species and habitats which have been the subject of Biodiversity Action Plans, or BAPs, set up since the Convention on Biological Diversity was signed at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. The report shows that 24 per cent of the priority species are declining (88 species in total), as against 11 per cent which are improving. Typical continuing declines, besides red squirrels, plants such as juniper and fish such as the common skate, include the turtle dove, the twinflower and the brindled beauty moth. And 42 per cent of the priority habitats (19 habitats in total, including wildlife-rich upland chalk grassland and upland hay meadows) are in decline, as against 18 per cent which are improving. “These results are so poor so that it comes as no surprise that they have been hidden away,” Mark Avery, director of conservation for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, said. “Can you imagine a report on the state of the nation’s health, or economy, or education being ignored in the way that this report on the state of the nation’s wildlife has been? It is vital that cuts in public spending don’t harm the conservation of wildlife. We need to hear from the new government what measures it will take to reverse the declines.” … Dr Jeremy Biggs, director of the charity Pond Conservation, said the report had been “sneaked out”. He added: “Freshwaters in Britain, and especially England, are in a parlous state: 75 per cent of our rivers and streams break EU directive ecological standards, and 80 per cent of ponds are in poor condition, and have declined in quality over the past 10 years.” …

Report on failure to halt wildlife decline is buried