We are Victoria Square’s Charity of the Year
Ulster Wildlife, Northern Ireland’s largest local nature conservation charity, has been named Victoria Square’s Charity of the year for 2020. Victoria Square, Northern Ireland’s premier retail…
Ulster Wildlife, Northern Ireland’s largest local nature conservation charity, has been named Victoria Square’s Charity of the year for 2020. Victoria Square, Northern Ireland’s premier retail…
Join Mat Lundy, Head of Marine Recovery, for a tour of our native oyster nursery in Belfast Harbour - the first in an industrial shipping channel.
Ulster Wildlife has launched Northern Ireland’s first-ever Big Rockpool Ramble and is inviting everyone to get outdoors and explore their fin-tastic rocky shore wildlife to help with local…
Power NI, Northern Ireland's leading energy supplier, has announced its new partnership with Ulster Wildlife, a local charity dedicated to the protection of native species and their habitats…
To mark World Wildlife Day on Wednesday 03 March, Ulster Wildlife and its Our Bright Future Youth Advocates have launched the #LearnMoreOutdoors campaign, with an aim to encourage teachers to take…
We've been named The Boulevard’s Charity of the Year for 2022-23. The partnership with Northern Ireland’s premier designer outlet, in Banbridge, will provide a welcome boost for our work to…
Ulster Wildlife has expressed concern about the strategy on bovine TB (bTB) eradication for Northern Ireland which was launched last week by the TB Strategic Partnership Group. This could see…
Today, on World Habitat Day, Ulster Wildlife announces its new partnership with Power NI, Northern Ireland’s leading energy supplier.
Join Ronald Surgenor, our Nature Reserves Officer and wildlife expert, for a guided sea safari of the Gobbins and our Isle of Muck Nature Reserve, off Islandmagee.
Two adorable fox cubs captured by Rostrevor photographer Louis McNally are the face of Ulster Wildlife’s 2020 Calendar, which is on sale now to help raise vital funds for local wildlife.
Today, the NI Audit Office published a report stating that water quality in rivers and lakes in Northern Ireland has not improved since 2015 and is unlikely to meet European targets by 2027.