Rewilding Scotland

This article is an offshoot of our Ecological restoration Scotland page and focuses on community led rewilding or initiatives involving local communities.

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  • News Rewilding Nation declaration call for Scotland as Charter launched, scotlandbigpicture.com (Mar 15, 2024) — More than 2% of Scotland’s land now rewilding according to new figures

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Networks

  • The Scottish Rewilding Alliance, collaboration between like-minded organisations who share a mission to enable rewilding at a scale new to Scotland.
  • Northwoods Rewilding Network, scotlandbigpicture.com, Scotland-wide chain of landholdings committed to nature recovery and whose partners share a vision for an ecologically-restored landscape, where habitats are better connected and species can recover, expand and disperse. Page includes a map or Partners.

Organisations working with communities

The John Muir Trust (JMT) is a Scottish charity, established in 1983 to conserve wild land and wild places for the benefit of all. The Trust runs an environmental award scheme, manages several estates, mainly in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland and campaigns for better protection of wild land. In 2017, it took on a lease to manage Glenridding Common in the English Lake District.

Visions

Cairngorms Connect has a 200-year vision, to restore woodland to its natural limit, including high altitude montane woodlands; restore blanket bog and forest bogs, and restore natural processes to river floodplains. These restoration projects are intended to deliver benefits to people: reducing flood-risk, storing carbon, and providing homes for wildlife, as well as great places for people to visit.

Video

Trees for Life

Trees for Life is a registered charity working to rewild the Scottish Highlands.

Campaigns

  • Rewilding Nation Charter

The Scottish Rewilding Alliance is urging people from all walks of life to sign the Rewilding Nation Charter which calls on the Scottish Government to commit to nature recovery across 30% of land and sea. Despite growing praise for its rewilding progress, more than 2% of Scotland’s land is now (Spring 2024) rewilding, Scotland remains one of the most nature-depleted countries on Earth. Scotland is ranked 212 out of 240 countries and territories for the state of its nature, and 11% of its species face extinction.

Growing numbers of communities, charities, farmers and landowners are taking action to turn Scotland’s nature crisis around – helping society cope with climate breakdown’s floods, wildlife die-offs, droughts and crop failures, while creating jobs and economic opportunities. Rewilding 30% of Scotland can be achieved by restoring wild habitats including peatlands, native woodlands, wetlands, rivers and seas, with no loss of productive farmland. Rewilding goes hand-in-hand with nature-led farming, fishing and forestry, the Alliance says. Sign via rewild.scot, Scottish Rewilding Alliance.

The campaign includes a new feature-length film called Why Not Scotland? (Official trailer above), which explores how rewilding could happen on a bigger scale in the country. The documentary is being shown on a nationwide screening tour, Spring 2024. More information, including availability for independent screenings from 1 April 2024 via scotlandbigpicture.com...[1]

News and comment

2023

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  • News The world’s first rewilding centre has opened in Scotland, positive.news (Apr 17, 2023)

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2021

Vast area of Scottish Highlands to be rewilded in ambitious 30-year project, Sep 24[2]

References

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