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Last updated on May 30, 2012 at 18:37 EDT

Garden Favourites Earmarked for Protection

August 28, 2007
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ONCE-COMMON UK animals including hedgehogs, house sparrows and harvest mice will be prioritised for conservation efforts as part of a list of species needing protection approved by the government today.

Because of their decline, the garden and countryside favourites are among the mammals, birds, insects, invertebrates, plants, fish, sea creatures and fungi listed under the UK Biodiversity Action Plan.

A number of the country’s wildlife habitats, including traditional orchards and ponds, have also been added to the list as priorities for protection.

There are now 1,149 species of plants and animals and 65 habitats listed, up from 577 species and 49 habitats on the previous conservation list drawn up 10 years ago.

The new plan will be used to decide which species and habitats should be targeted for conservation work in a bid to halt the loss of biodiversity in the UK by 2010.

The revised list sees the garden tiger moth and the grass snake joining previously prioritised creatures such as the otter, bottlenosed dolphin, red squirrel and black grouse.

Pine martens, wild cats, mountain hares and brown long-eared bats have all been added to the list.

In the UK’s seas, longsnouted and shortsnouted seahorse species are both both classified as under threat, along with several types of shark including the porbeagle.

(c) 2007 Coventry Evening Telegraph. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.