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Home UK Wales

The species at risk of extinction in Wales named in first of its kind report

November 25, 2025
in Wales
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Getty Images A small bird, identified as a yellow wagtail, with a bright yellow underside and darker wings and head.
The bird is captured wings fully extended, and appears to be vocalizing (beak open).
The background is a vivid yellow field, likely rapeseed (canola) flowers, creating a strong color harmony with the bird.
The bird is perched momentarily on a flowering stem, which bends under its weight.Getty Images

The yellow wagtail is one of 27 bird species identified as being “at peril” in Wales

Thousands of species at risk of extinction in Wales have been revealed in a new study.

The “first of its kind in the UK” report identified the country’s rarest species, including the high brown fritillary butterfly and Snowden leaf beetle, based on how geographically restricted they are, said Natural Resources Wales.

Three thousand species were found to now exist in five places or fewer, making them highly vulnerable to habitat loss, climate change and sudden catastrophic incidents like storms or wildfires, it said.

The Welsh government body, tasked with conservation and protecting the environment, hopes the findings help it focus resources on areas at highest risk of losing species forever.

Since the start of the millennium, Wales has already witnessed the loss of 11 species, with the European turtle dove and belted beauty moth becoming geographically extinct.

The Species in Peril report warns others could face a similar fate, including the high brown fritillary butterfly and rainbow-coloured Snowdon leaf beetle, Arctic-Alpine pea mussel, woolly feather-moss and eyed chestnut wrinkle-lichen.

Dom William, Butterfly Conservation Close-up of a High Brown Fritillary butterfly with bright orange wings and black spots, perched on a white bramble flower against a green leafy backgroundDom William, Butterfly Conservation

Once widespread, the high brown fritillary butterfly is now only found at one site in the Vale of Glamorgan

But saving them may not cost the earth, according to Natural Resources Wales specialists.

“Some of the solutions for these species are incredibly simply,” said Mannon Lewis, strategic projects lead for the body.

Portrait of Mannon Lewis, framed in the centre of the image. She has shoulder length wavey blonded or light brown hair and is smiling as she looks directly into the camera. She is wearing a black winter coat, with the white Natural Resources Wales logo in English and Welsh on the left side of the coast. She is wearing a scarf or neckwarmer, that is dark green and black. She is stood on pasture that is in fact sand dunes at Newborough Warren on Anglesey. Behind her can be seen the outline of mountains on the mainland, including the Carneddau and Eryri ranges, with some covered in snow. The sky is a mix of blue and some heavy dramatic clouds.

Ms Lewis says there are “low-cost, simple measures”

She continued: “It is to do with changing the grazing regime, changing when we cut our grass, not felling, looking at different ways of trimming our hedges.

“They are low-cost, simple measures and now we know exactly where we need to do it.”

The report pinpoints the role both nature reserves and sites of special scientific interest play in ensuring plants and animals survive.

It highlights locations such as Newborough Warren on Anglesey, which is home to 130 of the at-risk species.

It is a designated national nature reserve, made up of sand dunes and forests, where projects are already under way to improve the environment.

Among steps already taken are the introduction of ponies to graze and opening up some of the dunes to the elements.

“It’s already achieved a lot,” said Mike Howe, one of the ecologists who helped draw up the new study.

“Within months of opening up some of these bare areas, we had species of beetle, which hadn’t been recorded on Newborough for about 10 years, suddenly appearing in huge numbers.”

Getty Images Two turtle doves perched on a weathered branch against a soft green background. The birds have patterned wings with shades of brown, black, and gray, and slender bodies with pinkish legsGetty Images

The European turtle dove has become geographically extinct in Wales

Conservationist Tyler Hallman said Natural Resources Wales’ approach – particularly linking networks of special sites and nature reserves – offered a positive way forward and could even lead to species currently extinct in Wales making a return.

“I think there are huge conservation success stories,” he said.

“The European turtle dove is extinct in Wales but, over the last few years, their population in Europe has increased greatly so who knows – that one might come back.

“You might see things coming back as conditions improve and the species as a whole do better. I guess that’s a huge positive – there are things we can do.”



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Tags: extinctionkindnamedreportriskspeciesWales

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