Wildlife
Introduction
Bristol has more green spaces than any other British city and a wealth of urban wildlife. There are over 80 designated wildlife sites in the city most of which are managed by Bristol City Council. They include everything from the Avon Wildlife Trust’s nature park on Brandon Hill to the spectacular Avon Gorge and contain some wonderful wildlife – from skylarks and kingfishers to cowslips and ancient oaks. You can also discover wildflower meadows, bluebell woods, streamside walks, wildlife ponds and hillsides carpeted with heather.
Bristol Parks is working to look after its parks for wildlife and to increase people’s enjoyment and understanding of wildlife in the city. We are involved in a wide range of major conservation projects, from introducing wildflower meadows into parks and designating Local Nature Reserves, to monitoring rare plants on the Avon Gorge and organising wildlife events with local people.We are also a partner in The Bristol Biodiversity Action Partnership.
Nature conservation issues are often a material consideration in development control and you can get information here on biodiversity and the planning system.
Fascinating facts about Bristol's wildlife
- Peregrine falcons returned to nest in Bristol in 1990. They nearly became extinct in the 1960s due to widespread pesticide use and last nested in the Avon Gorge in 1934.
- Common lizards live less than two miles from the city centre in allotments in St Werburghs - they are the gardener's friend, eating many pests.
- Bristol has one of the largest badger population of any city in the UK.
- Bristol used to have the largest fox population anywhere in the world. In 1996 Mange disease nearly wiped them out but numbers are now recovering.
- Bristol has three rare plants named after it - the Bristol Onion, the Bristol Rock-cress and the Bristol Whitebeam - all are resident in the Avon Gorge and found nowhere else in Britain.
- The Severn estuary is an internationally important area for large flocks of wintering wildfowl and waders, so much so that it has received a European designation as a special protection area for birds.
- A 900 year old hedge survives in Southmead and many of the city's older streets follow the lines of hedges they replaced.
Where to see the best of Bristol’s wildlife
Follow the links below to discover some of Bristol’s top wildlife sites:
- Troopers Hill Local Nature Reserve
- Lawrence Weston Moor Local Nature Resreve
- Stockwood Open Space Nature Reserve
- Royate Hill Local Nature Reserve
- Badocks Wood Local Nature Reserve
- Manor Woods Valley Local Nature Reserve
- Eastwood Farm Local Nature Reserve
- Old Sneed Park Nature Reserve
- The Downs
- Blaise Castle Estate
- Ashton Court Estate
- Brandon Hill
- Northern Slopes
- Narroways
- Callington Road Nature Reserve
- Highridge Common
Contact us
You can call Bristol Parks on 0117 922 3719 or email: bristolparks@bristol.gov.uk Monday to Friday 8.30am - 5pm (4.30pm Friday). Alternatively you can text us on 0771 039 6713 to report flytipping, graffiti, or make any other comments about Bristol's parks and green spaces. Please provide as much information and specific details as possible about the location attaching any supporting photographs. We will only call you back if we require further information.
Pages in this section
- Breathing Places
- Bristol's Wildlife Projects
- Callington Road Nature Reserve
- Highridge Common
- Old Sneed Park Nature Reserve
- Planning and biodiversity
- The Bristol Biodiversity Action Plan
related links
-
Avon Wildlife Trust - Promoting and protecting wildlife by creating wildlife havens
- Bristol Harbour - Homepage for Bristol's harbour
- Bristol's Nature Reserves - Discover Bristol's fantastic Local Nature Reserves
- Bristol Parks - Homepage for Bristol's Parks and Green Spaces
-
ClimateActive - Information from Forest of Avon on climate change for local communities
- CREATE Centre walk - A wildlife walk around Brsitol's environment centre
- General information - More news, information and initiatives from Bristol Parks
- Healthy living - Stay fit and healthy in Bristol's parks and green spaces
- Useful links - To online information relating to parks, green spaces, planning, wildlife, conservation, arboriculture, horticulture, and sustainability
related documents
- Bristol's Big Wildlife Map (pdf, 561 Kb)
- Bristol city centre nature trail (pdf, 3263 Kb)
- Nature in the City newsletter 2007/8 (pdf, 1173 Kb)
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