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Bumblebee on a purple allium.
Home Learning Trails for Adults Wildlife-Friendly Gardening
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Wildlife-Friendly Gardening

Inspiration for creating a garden full of biodiversity.

(This is the online version of the paper booklet available at ticket offices in the Garden.)

Gardens cover a surprisingly large area in the UK, about a fifth the size of Wales. That’s a lot of potentially important habitat for wildlife, especially in urban areas. Up to a quarter of a city’s area may be made up of gardens and so, although each garden on its own is small, together they form a patchwork linking urban green spaces with nature reserves and the wider countryside.

Some would say that gardens, sympathetically managed for wildlife in the city, provide a haven for many more species than that provided by the countryside where intensive agriculture dominates and only small fragmented and shrinking habitats remain.

This trail will take you around the Botanic Garden from the viewpoint of the wildlife that it supports, and hopes to inspire you to think of your garden as more than just a place for recreation, growing food or a place of beauty and relaxation, but also an essential wildlife refuge.

Download the Wildlife-Friendly Gardening brochure or map.

Why Garden for wildlife?

Wildlife is under threat; preventing its loss is probably as important an endeavour as preventing run away climate change. We are wholly dependent on the diversity of living organisms that we share this planet with, whether that be for pollination of our crops, regulation of our climate, or purification of our water, provision of food and medicine and wellbeing. Only healthy ecosystems can continue to deliver these free services and an ecosystem’s health is a function of its biodiversity. It’s not only the biodiversity in wilderness areas that needs our protection, its also the biodiversity in our back yard, as everything is connected.

When we talk about garden wildlife, we include all invertebrates such as bees, dragonflies, earthworms, hoverflies, beetles, butterflies and moths, in addition to vertebrates such as bats, hedgehogs, birds, frogs and toads and grass snakes. Some garden wildlife may be considered much less desirable than others including species such as slugs, muntjac, rats and aphids against whom many of us will wage a constant battle. It’s how we wage this battle that is important if we want to ensure that beneficial wildlife is not caught in the cross fire.

Wildlife needs four things to thrive in a garden: water, food, shelter and a place to breed. If we are able to provide even some of these things, you will be benefitting the biodiversity on your doorstep. Plants are the foundation of the ecosystem and the greater the variety of plants in a garden the more wildlife species it will attract.

Help us keep track of the species using the Botanic Garden by recording your sightings on iRecord in the activity called CU wildlife recording.  Detailed guidance on how to use iRecord and our activity can be found here.

Trail points

Stream Garden

Stream Garden

Adding Water
Schools' Garden

Schools' Garden

Sustainability
Bee Borders

Bee Borders

Plants for pollinators
Dry Garden

Dry Garden

Adapting to climate change
Fen Display

Fen Display

Use peat free composts
British Wild Habitats

British Wild Habitats

Plants for all stages of the insect lifecycle
Dry perennial meadow

Dry perennial meadow

Scented Garden

Scented Garden

Function of smell
Natural Area

Natural Area

Don't be too tidy
Wood pile

Wood pile

Providing wildlife habitat

You may also be interested in:

Wildlife Surveying in the Garden

Wildlife Surveying in the Garden

Every Friday morning since March 2018, a small group of volunteers have been checking a light trap for moths caught overnight
Trails for Adults

Trails for Adults

Our set of trails for adults is designed for visitors keen to discover more about plants.
Pre-book tickets

Pre-book tickets

We are pleased to welcome the public to the Garden, pre-booking is optional, walk ups welcome.
University of Cambridge Museums and Botanic Garden

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