Biodiversity of Wales


The biodiversity of Wales is the wide variety of ecosystems, living organisms, and the genetic makeups found in Wales.
Wales is a predominantly mountainous peninsula located between England and the Irish Sea, covering 8,023 square miles. It has terrestrial habitats and many protected areas rich in biodiversity, including three national parks and five Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The national parks being: Snowdonia, Pembrokeshire Coast, and Brecon Beacons, and the AONBs of: Anglesey, the Clwydian Range and Dee Valley, Gower Peninsula, Llŷn Peninsula, and Wye Valley. Wales also has many locations categorised as Site of Special Scientific Interest, Special Area of Conservation, Special Protection Area and local nature reserve. There are many zoos and gardens, including the National Botanic Garden of Wales.
On the coast, a great diversity of species such as seals, dolphins, sharks, jellyfish, crabs and lobsters can be found. There are also seabird colonies on the islands near the coast. Species which can only be found in Wales are the Radnor lily and a type of fish, the gwyniad, only found in Llyn Tegid. The rare fen orchid is one of the most threatened species in northwestern Europe and has vanished from many places in Wales. The Welsh Government funds Natural Resources Wales, Plantlife, Bridgend County Borough Council and the Wales Biodiversity Partnership coastal ecosystem group to help reconstruct its natural habitat and secure the future of this threatened species.
The Welsh Government works closely with the Wales Biodiversity Partnership which promotes and monitors the Wales biodiversity action plan. In 2010 the Welsh government launched a Natural Environment Framework, "A Living Wales", which focuses on sustainable land and marine management in Wales. The Environment (Wales) Act 2016 put into place a range of powers and duties designed to enable the natural resources of Wales to be planned and management in a more sustainable, pro-active and joined-up way than was previously possible.

Elements

Floral biodiversity

Trees

The sessile oak, one of Wales's most common species, can be found across the region. English holly, one of the few native evergreen trees, can be found in southern Wales. The wych elm, a native species, suffers from disease and competition introduced by exotic species.

Flowers

The cuckoo flower, a herbaceous perennial, can be found throughout Wales. Bog rosemary, a small flowering shrub, can be found in central Wales. Within the British Isles, the Snowdon lily is found only on the slopes of Snowdon.

Important Plant Areas

Important Plant Areas in Wales are areas of "the highest botanical importance" as determined by Plantlife.
Historic county
SpeciesHabitat
Anglesey Spotted rock-rose Dry, rocky places
Brecknockshire Cuckooflower Wet grassland and pond margins
Caernarvonshire Snowdon lily Mountain rocks
Cardiff
Not an historic county
Wild leek Sandy and rocky places near the sea
Cardiganshire Bog-rosemary Mid-Wales
Carmarthenshire Whorled caraway Damp meadows
Denbighshire Limestone woundwort Roadsides and hedges
Flintshire Bell heather Heaths and moors
Glamorgan Yellow whitlow-grass Rocks and old walls
Merionethshire Welsh poppy Damp, shady rocks
Monmouthshire Foxglove Woodland clearings, heaths and banks
Montgomeryshire Spiked speedwell Limestone rocks
Pembrokeshire Thrift Coastal cliffs or astride craggy islands
Radnorshire Radnor lily Limestone rocks

Faunal diversity

Marine

Around Cardigan Bay and Pembrokeshire coast, minke and pilot whales are common in the summer while fin and killer whales are rare. Bottlenose dolphins are common and Risso’s dolphin and Atlantic white-sided dolphin are rare. Whales, grey seals, basking sharks and sunfish can also be seen.

Mammals

Roe deer and fallow deer are the two largest mammal species in Wales. Roe deer are found in central and northern Wales. Fallow deer are found in rural and semiurban areas of Wales. The European polecat can be found in both urban and country environments. Found in the same area is the red fox, one of the most common mammals in Wales.
The red deer, one of five native deer species, is the biggest non-marine mammal in Wales.. Fallow, muntjac roe and sika deer can also be found. pine martens are very rarely seen. Other mammals include badgers, foxes, hares, hedgehogs, otters, rabbits, stoats, weasels, red squirrels, and 13 species of bat.

Birds

About 430 species of birds have been found in Wales. Red kites and ospreys are some "signature species" of Wales. Dippers, choughs, puffins, guillemots, razorbills, short-eared owls, Manx shearwaters, whimbrel and plovers are also common. Montagu's harrier, a rare species in Britain, has several nesting places in Wales. Red grouse, once a common species, has reduced population dramatically due to human hunting. Red grouse can be found at the extreme north part of Wales.

Reptiles

Adders, common lizards, notably around Oxwich Bay and grass snakes have been recorded. Some sand lizards bred by Herpetological Conservation Trust volunteers and Chester and Jersey Zoos have been released into the wild.

Priority Species

SpeciesSpecies
Lesser horseshoe bat Greater horseshoe bat
Common pipistrelle Common dolphin
Natterjack toad Grass snake
Common lizard Pine marten
Chough Common toad
Harbour porpoise Bottlenose dolphin
Minke whale Otter
Marsh fritillary Twait shad
Great crested newt Adder
Eurasian skylark Polecat
Water vole Risso's dolphin

Endemism

Trees

Native species include ash, birch, oak, willow, holly, juniper, Scots pine and yew. Planting and conservation of natives species is encouraged, because they tend to better survive the local environment. They also help balance the biodiversity and provide wood and timbers.

Flowering plants

Ash, service tree, wild leeks, Tenby daffodil.

Bryophytes

Wales has over 300 species of mosses and liverworts.
The endangered species are: Bartramia stricta, Cryphaea lamyana, Ditrichum plumbicola, Hamatocaulis vernicosus, Pallavicinia lyellii, Petalophyllum ralfsii, Riccia huebeneriana and Sematophyllum demissum.

Mammals

Birds

Reptiles

There are five native reptiles in Wales. These include grass snakes, sand lizards, common lizards and slowworms.

Amphibians

There are six native amphibians in Wales. They are the common toad, great crested newt, natterjack toad, palmate newt, smooth newt and common frog.

Invertebrates

An estimated 25,000 invertebrate species live in land and freshwater habitats in Wales.

Human impact

Welsh biodiversity has been reduced by human activity. Many native species were lost because of lack of woodland support. Believed to be home to some of Wales's rarest land invertebrates, some 2,500 disused coal tips are the subject of study by the Welsh Government; the tips are home to a wide variety of other wildlife.

Animals

Many conservation projects have been set up to preserve the red squirrel. There is a great decline in the number of hedgehogs. The use of pesticides has caused a major decline in honeybees; a Pollinator Action plan was launched at the Royal Welsh Show in July 2012.

Management

Wales has 175 species on the Section 74 list of Species of Principal Importance for the Conservation of Biological Diversity. However, the list of species and habitats of principal importance in Wales is now based on new legislation in the form of sections 6 and 7 of the Environment 2016 Act. In Wales, the United Kingdom Biodiversity Action Plan was implemented by the Wales Biodiversity Partnership. The Countryside Council for Wales also assists in sustainability management.
Wales Biodiversity Partnership organises the overall plan, and on a local scale, each council carries out its own surveys and reports back, then produces management and protection plants for the identified species and habitats.
The Welsh government cooperates with European Community directives on the conservation of wild birds and natural habitats and wild flora and fauna as well as with NATURA 2000.

Biodiversity

Areas

Organisations

Law

Journal articles

  • Paul A. Ashton and Richard J. Abbott, "", Heredity 68, 25–32; doi:10.1038/hdy.1992.3.
  • Richard J. Abbott, Andrew J. Lowe, "", Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, Volume 82, Issue 4, pages 467–474, August 2004. DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.2004.00333.x.
  • John L. Harper, J. N. Clatworthy, I. H. McNaughton and G. R. Sagar, "", Evolution, Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 209–227.
  • K. M. Dlugosch, I. M. Parker, "″, Molecular Ecology, Volume 17, Issue 1, pages 431–449, January 2008, DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03538.x.
  • Peter R. Sheldon, "", Nature 330, 561 – 563 ; doi:10.1038/330561a0.
  • Denis W. Gartside and Thomas McNeilly, "″, Heredity 32, 335–348; doi:10.1038/hdy.1974.42.
  • S. N. Raina and H. Rees, "", Heredity 51, 335–346; doi:10.1038/hdy.1983.38.
  • R. K. J. Narayan, "", Evolution Vol. 36, No. 5, pp. 877–891.
  • R. K. J. Naravan and A. Durrant, "", Genetica Volume 61, Number 1, 47–53, DOI: 10.1007/BF00563231.
  • Kathy H. Hodder and James M. Bullock, "", Journal of Applied Ecology Vol. 34, No. 3, pp. 547–565.

Tools

Resources

  • – Latest reports, research and opinion on biodiversity.
  • – Open access digital library of taxonomic literature.
  • – Documenting all species of life on earth.
  • National Biodiversity Network Gateway.
  • – Relationships & characteristics of all life on earth.