Seven conservation success stories from the battle to protect nature

When it’s done right, conservation can help to heal our damaged world. Let these conservation success stories inspire you to keep standing up for our home.

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History shows that if we move fast and act with courage, humanity can protect and restore our most important places, and bring amazing creatures back from the edge of extinction. 

Although there’s still so much more to do, let’s take a moment to celebrate some conservation success stories, and let them inspire us to keep standing up for our beautiful home.

Red kites come back from the brink

The reintroduction of the red kite to Britain is one of the greatest conservation success stories of the 20th century. After decades of persecution from egg collectors and illegal poisoning, red kites were practically extinct in the UK by the late 1980s. However, in 1989, conservationists started re-introducing red kites from Sweden, and their numbers steadily grew.

Today, gliding red kites are a common sight over large parts of the countryside. According to the RSPB, they’ve been so successful it’s no longer possible to count them in an annual survey!

Red kites descend on a feeding station at the Gigrin Farm Red Kite Feeding Centre in Rhayader, Wales.

Red kites descend on a feeding station at the Gigrin Farm Red Kite Feeding Centre in Rhayader, Wales. Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

Protecting the Great Bear Rainforest

In 2009, the government of British Columbia announced a conservation plan for the Great Bear Rainforest – the most comprehensive of its kind in North America. This victory followed a ten-year campaign – one of the longest in Greenpeace history.

A waterfall runs out from a densely-forested hillside and into a calm lake in the Great Bear Rainforest

The Great Bear Rainforest stretches along the mainland coast of British Columbia to the Alaska border, and makes up a quarter of all the coastal temperate rainforest left in the world. © Oliver Salge / Greenpeace

A large white bear stands in a shallow river with a large fish in its mouth.

The White Spirit Bear appears for just a few weeks each year in the Great Bear Rainforest in Canada – the only place on earth they exist. The bear is actually a black bear which carries a recessive gene which gives it a pale gold colour. Mark Carwardine / Barcroft Media / Getty Images

Beavers return to Britain

More than 400 years after it was hunted to extinction in the UK, the beaver is back! Initially illegally released in Tayside, Scotland a few years ago, there are now over 400 beavers in 100 territories. Beavers are now a protected species in Scotland.

A beaver sits on its hind legs in long grass

The UK’s beaver population is steadily increasing. Steve Raubenstine / Pixabay

Saving the Mauritius kestrel

This bird of prey was close to extinction in the mid 1970s, with only five individuals left. Today over 400 birds fly in the forests of Mauritius, thanks to successful conservation efforts and breeding programmes. 

A Mauritius kestrel sits on a branch in a lush forest

A Mauritius kestrel in its natural habitat John Mauremoootoo (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Defusing the ‘carbon bomb’ under the Congo Basin rainforest

Scientists recently discovered a vast ‘carbon bomb’ in the swamps of the Congo Basin rainforest. If the carbon stored in these swamps was released (if the trees were cut down and the water drained away, for example) the climate impact would be equivalent to three years’ worth of total global fossil fuels.

Following the discovery of the peatlands in 2018, governments signed the Brazzaville Declaration to protect this rich habitat, and keep its giant carbon stores locked safely underground. 

An aerial view of lush swampland, with a cloudy sky reflected in still water.

Protected peatland forest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo © Daniel Beltrá / Greenpeace

 

A red-tailed monkey sitting on a branch in a lush forest. It's mouth is open as if it's uttering a loud call.

The protected swamplands are an important habitat for the red-tailed monkey. © Daniel Beltrá / Greenpeace

Reviving the blue iguana

In 2001 there were fewer than 30 blue iguanas left in the wild. By 2018, there were more than 1000, thanks to a heroic recovery programme run by the National Trust in the Cayman Islands. The Blue Iguana can only be found in the dry forests of Grand Cayman, usually eating fruits and flowers, and sunning itself in open clearings.

A blue iguana looks over its left shoulder into the camera

A blue iguana in Grand Cayman Joshua Stoner / Pixabay

The crane’s amazing comeback in the UK

The crane is the UK’s largest bird, standing at 1.2m tall and flying up to 72km per hour. And it was absent as a common breeding bird for nearly 400 years due to hunting and wetland drainage. But thanks to habitat restoration and reintroduction by initiatives like the Great Crane Project, there are now an estimated 200 birds in Wales, Scotland, the Fens, Suffolk and Gloucestershire.

Why not try and see if you can spot a crane in the UK?

Two cranes flying over wetlands with low hills in the background

A pair of cranes picutred at Slimbridge Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, Gloucestershire © Allan Hopkins

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