試す 金 - 無料
DUNE BUGS
BBC Wildlife
|August 2021
Corrugated sand spanning some 20km fringes the Sefton Coast in Merseyside. It’s the UK’s largest undeveloped dune system – bustling with rare insects, reptiles and amphibians – and is the focus of a major conservation project.
At first glance, sand can seem a harsh, inhospitable environment – yet dunes are teeming with life. Those flanking the Sefton Coast host a diverse community of rare and beautiful species, including this iridescent northern dune tiger beetle photographed by Alex Hyde while documenting the Gems in the Dunes project, part of the wider Back from the Brink conservation programme. “These ultra-predators are just berserk – speedy and tricky to photograph,” he recalls. “They’ll charge anything that moves.” Habitat restoration work at Sefton – home to Britain’s largest northern dune tiger beetle population – included the creation of open sand patches for such animals to bask on and burrow in.

The setting sun gilds the grasses crowning Sefton’s dunes, signalling a changing of the guard: diurnal species retreat into burrows, while their nocturnal counterparts emerge to feed and mate. “Each morning, little half-moon holes in the slopes reveal where tiger beetles left their burrows,” says Alex, “and tiny tracks spidering the dunes – footprints of insects, sand lizards, natterjack toads – write stories into the sand.” Protection of this habitat, much of which has been destroyed across Britain, is vital; on the Sefton Coast alone, some 81 per cent of bare sand has gone since 1945.

このストーリーは、BBC Wildlife の August 2021 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
BBC Wildlife からのその他のストーリー
BBC Wildlife
Can animals make friends?
THERE ARE MANY REASONS WHY ANIMAL species band together with others of their kind – for protection in numbers, to achieve a common goal, to safeguard young or to maximise breeding opportunities. But are any of these relationships true friendships in our human understanding of the word?
1 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
What is the rights of nature movement?
THE RIGHTS OF NATURE MOVEMENT argues that nonhuman natural entities and ecosystems, from rivers to woodlands and coral reefs to savannahs, are not mere property but rights holders in law.
2 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
BEAK & CLAW
Raptors have declined across Africa, but a new effort to safeguard them is underway
7 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
TAKE ME TO THE RIVER
Going deep into the Amazon on a river cruise offers a different way of experiencing this extraordinary place
7 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
NIGHT MOVES
Noctourism reveals wildlife's secret rhythms while boosting vital conservation efforts
7 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
Mountain highs and seafaring lows with Lauren Owens Lambert
THE INSIDE WORLD OF WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHY
3 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
Proboscis monkey's big nose boosts vocal identity
A new study shows how nose shape creates resonant frequencies that allow individuals to be recognised
1 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
"I have never known fear like it"
Leopard and lions in Mozambique
3 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
Free as a bird
THE ARTICLE ON HOW ANIMALS USE sound in the September issue included comment on dialect or accent in birdsong.
2 mins
November 2025
BBC Wildlife
Rattlesnakes inbreeding
Break up of habitat leads to desperate measures
1 min
November 2025
Translate
Change font size
