Algal bloom
A rapid increase in the number of algae in a body of water, often making the water look green, red, or brown.
A rapid increase in the number of algae in a body of water, often making the water look green, red, or brown.
The farming of fish, shellfish, or seaweed in the water.
Drugs used to treat animals for parasites such as worms and ticks.
A group of different species that are found together in one place.
A tree that has reached a great age compared to others of the same species and has cultural, landscape or biodiversity value. Ancient trees are veteran trees, but not all veteran trees are old enough to be ancient.
A way to manage land that combines trees and hedges with agriculture to provide environmental, economic and social benefits.
Area of particular importance for biodiversity
Area that could be of particular importance for biodiversity
Animals that are accidentally caught when people are fishing for something else.
Carbon that is captured and stored by coastal and marine ecosystems.
Created by living organisms.
Used to attract and catch animals, especially fish.
Water carried in tanks by boats to help them stay balanced.
A way to create and improve natural habitats that makes sure development has a net gain for biodiversity compared to what was there before.
Biodiversity net gain
A method used to catch and study shore crabs by placing flat tiles or stones on the beach.
When coastal habitats, such as saltmarshes or mudflats, get trapped between rising sea levels and hard structures like sea walls or buildings.
A chiton is a small sea creature that lives on rocks along the seashore.
Of a tree – refers to the upper parts, including the branches, stems and leaves.
A traditional way to manage woodland where trees are felled at their base from where new shoots will grow.
The process of capturing and storing carbon.
(in years). The amount of time carbon is stored in rocks, the ocean, the atmopshere, plants, soil and fossil fuels.
County Wildlife Site
A small, brightly coloured fish that lives on the sea floor.
A natural toxin made by certain types of algae in the ocean.
A type of tiny algae that lives in water.
The drying out of plants, animals, or habitats, usually due to a lack of water or extreme heat.
Dips between sand dunes that often contain water.
Dartmoor National Park Authority
Devon Biodiversity Records Centre
Devon Species of Conservation Concern which have been ‘shortlised’ as needing particular action or attention (rather than being iconic species).
When too many nutrients (like those found in fertilisers or sewage) enter the water, causing lots of algae to grow.
UK government schemes where farmers are paid to farm productively and in a way that benefits the environment.
Describes a plant or animal that is native and restricted to a certain place.
Environmental land management
Environment Agency
Types of algae that grow on surfaces like rocks, boats and fishing gear.
Food, such as hay or silage, for cattle and other farm animals.
Farming in Protected Landscapes
Forest Stewardship Council
Fishing nets that have been lost or abandoned in the ocean.
When seals leave the water and come onto land or rocks to rest, sleep or give birth.
A hybrid is created when a plant or animal is mixed (hybridised) with a plant or animal of a different variety or species.
A newly hatched fish, amphibian, reptile or bird.
Hectare: an area of 10,000 square metres, or 2.47 acres
The area of the shore that is covered by water at high tide and exposed to air at low tide.
An animal that doesn’t have a backbone, such as insects, spiders, worms, crabs and slugs.
The natural passage of rain into the soil where it falls.
Irreplaceable habitat, if destroyed, is very difficult (or takes a significant time) to restore, recreate or replace because of its age, uniqueness, species diversity or rarity.
International Union for Conservation of Nature
Joint Nature Conservation Committee
Land Use Framework
Marine Management Organisation
The average height of the low tides at a particular place, measured over a long period of time.
Mixed woodlands include both conifers and broadleaved trees.
An organism that can be seen only through a microscope.
The process of nutrients being moved around and reused in the sand by animals and other organisms.
A continuous process where nutrients move from the physical environment to living organisms and back to the physical environment.
A moorland field that has recently been cultivated.
A species likely to qualify for threatened category in the future, perhaps very quickly.
National Environment Research Council
When the ocean becomes more acidic because it absorbs extra carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the air.
A commodity, product or service that’s available to all and that everyone can use repeatedly without reducing its availability to others, typically provided by a government and funded through taxes.
A dataset that describes the geographic extent and location of habitats designated under the Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act (2006) as being of principal importance.
A way to prune trees and shrubs back to a trunk to keep them smaller than they would naturally grow and form a head of branches.
People’s Trust for Endangered Species
Priority Habitats Inventory
Plantation on ancient woodland sites
Planning Advisory Service
A shallow part of a river where water flows quickly over rocks and stones.
(Also known as the red list). A list of the global conservation status and extinction risk of animal, fungus and plant species, managed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
The area of the sea just below the low tide mark.
Small pieces of rock, sand, mud, or organic material that settle at the bottom of rivers, lakes, or the sea.
A small, slender fish that looks a bit like an eel.
The mixing and movement of sand by animals as they burrow and feed.
An oak tree with dead branches protruding from the top of the tree. This gives the appearance of antlers, similar to those of a stag.
A surface or material than an organism lives, grows or feeds on.
A report on the UK’s current biodiversity.
A system that combines trees with grazing land.
The ageing process and the deterioration it causes.
Site of Special Scientific Interest
The amount of suspended particles carried in the water.
An area of land 2km x 2km square.
Very damp, often ancient woodlands where mosses, lichens, liverworts and ferns grow in abundance, including on trees. Temperate rainforests are threatened and globally rare.
Town and Country Planning Act
The process of damaging younger trees to give them the features of veteran trees and create habitats for a range of wildlife.