Wildlife

Wild animals are facing immense challenges from climate change, habitat destruction, pesticide use, loss of hedgerows, the urbanisation of gardens, roads traversing their environments and the ever-increasing urban sprawl. Animal Aid calls for tolerance, for compassion and a willingness to concede space to the natural world.

Help Wildlife in a Changing Climate

The climate crisis is bringing extreme weather that threatens Britain’s wildlife. Heatwaves, droughts, floods, and storms increasingly put our beloved species at risk. It’s crucial we take action to protect British animals from these severe weather conditions.

Click here for tips to help wildlife in hot weather

Humane Wildlife Deterrence

Animal Aid encourages tolerance but there are times when we may need to deter an animal from a particular area, such as a squirrel who has taken up residence in your attic. Thankfully, many unwanted visitors can be deterred quite easily. Once you know what attracts an animal to your home or garden, it can be changed. For more information about humanely deterring wildlife, download Alternatives to Culling and the associated factfiles on birds, squirrels, foxes or mice and rats.

Order a Humane Deterrence Pack, which includes the factfiles on individual species

Culling by Councils and Local Authorities

Animal Aid has long been concerned about the growing tendency to scapegoat various animal species because they are regarded as urban ‘pests’ or ‘aliens’, who  are often blamed for encroaching on our space! Many local authorities have a pest control department or hire the services of one. Animal Aid encourages all authorities to explore safe, effective and humane approaches rather than killing wild animals.

If you find out there is a cull in your area, you can read our practical advice – species by species – about how to fight it here.

Campaign against a cull

Campaign news

General Election 2024: What’s next for animals?

This morning, people all over the country will be waking up to a new government with Labour winning a landslide majority in yesterday’s General Election (July 4). But what does this mean for animals?

Posted 05 Jul 2024