There's a wealth of sites on-line where you can find out about how to identify wildlife. So here's a list of some of the useful ones for the British Isles. If you notice any broken links or find a website that's not yet listed here but you feel should be, let me know!
General
I-Spot is an online community where you can share your wildlife sightings and get help from other users on issues of identification.
Open Air Laboratories (OPAL) has some excellent guides to British wildlife.
NatureSpot is a great resource too, with photo guides to most types of
wildlife in the UK (focussing on Leicestershire and Rutland). If you can't see the group of wildlife you're after in the lists below, try Nature Spot. (This site is currently down, but hopefully will reappear soon, it's invaluable!)
First Nature seems to be a good resource for European wildlife with a focus on Wales and the Algarve in Portugal.
Microscopy UK has a guide to freshwater algae.
The British Marine Life Study Society has a page about seaweeds.
The Fieldguide to British seaweeds is here.
Birds
The RSPB website is a great resource for British birders, I link to it a lot in my blog posts. It has a very useful bird guide where you can browse by species or family and a bird identifier to help you identify what you've seen. The bird guide includes sound files, though only for songs, not calls.
You may also be interested in xeno-canto which shares sound-files of birds from around the world.
The British Trust for Ornithology has some excellent bird identification videos on its website.
You can identify feathers from British birds on Featherbase here.
Mammals
UK Safari has an information page with links to information about UK mammals.
Amphibians and Reptiles
Amphibian and Reptile Conservation has an online guide to British amphibians and an online guide to British reptiles.
Fish
First Nature has a guide to British and European fish
Invertebrates
The Royal Entomological Society offer a free service to help identify insects.
The UK Pollinator Monitoring Scheme has a useful guide to telling the difference between bees, hoverflies and other groups of insects.
Leaf Mines UK offers a guide to leaf mining invertebrates and recording of leaf mining moths.
Beetles
Coleoptera UK is a comprehensive guide to British beetles and recording
UK Safari profiles some of the British species of beetles.
A Guide to British Soldier Beetles.
Ladybirds
Nature Spot has a useful guide to ladybirds here.
Butterflies
UK Butterflies has a page with links to identification guides for all stages of the butterfly life cycle, so whether you have seen an adult, a caterpillar, an egg or a pupa, they can help!
Butterfly Conservation has an A_Z of British Butterflies.
Nature Spot has a good photographic butterfly guide.
Moths
UK Moths offers identification guides to 2155 species of moths. Which is a lot.
Caterpillars
Wildlife Insite has a useful site to help identification of caterpillars of moths, butterflies and sawflies.
East of Scotland Butterfly Conservation has a Moth ID gallery.
Hoverflies
The Nature Spot Guide to Hoverflies.
All About Hoverflies page.
Steven Falk's Flickr album of Hoverfly photos.
Sawflies
The Sawfly website is a work in progress, but does include an (incomplete) species guide.
Bees
The Natural History Museum has a neat little guide to bumblebee identification.
Blooms for Bees clear guide to Bumble bees and Cuckoo Bumbles.
The Bees Wasps and Ants Recording Society has a beginners' guide to identifying these groups.
British Nature Guides guide to bees, wasps, parasitic wasps and wasp galls.
Bugs
British Bugs has an identification guide for true bugs (Hemiptera) of the UK.
Dragonflies and Damselflies
British Dragonfly Society has a guide to Dragonflies and Damselflies of the UK.
Spiders
UK Safari has a section dedicated to spiders.
Molluscs
The Conchological Society has an online guide to identifying snails and slugs.
Earthworms
There is a website dedicated to photos of earthworks here.
Trees
The Woodland Trust has an online guide to British Trees.
Wild Flowers
The British Wild Flowers website is a useful photographic guide to British wildflowers.
Plantlife is currently building an online guide to British wildflowers and fungi.
Flora of East Anglia has a guide to the differences between Grasses, Sedges and Rushes.
Ferns
The British Pteridological Society has a photographic guide to UK ferns.
The British Wild Flowers website has a useful photographic guide to grasses, sedges, rushes and ferns.
Fungi
Here is a guide to edible fungi in the UK and how to avoid poisonous species.
Mosses and Liverworts
The British Bryological Society offers an on-line resource for identifying mosses and liverworts.
Lichens
British Lichens is a site to help you identify lichens.
Foraging
There's a brief overview of foraging for wild food here with links to identifying species that you can forage.
and if you are a forager, you should follow principles sustainable harvesting to make sure there's enough left over for others (people and wildlife!). There are some simple guidelines for sustainable foraging here.
As ever, red text contains hyperlinks which take you to other webpages where you can find out more.
10 comments:
WOW! Lots of information here about wildlife in the U.K.
Hi Juliet,
Thanks for sharing all the information and will be good finding out more about your birds and wildlife.
happy week
Hugs Carolyn
What a superb list of helpful sites! Though I live in Canada, I've found lots of information here to guide me too. Thank you, Juliet.
Impressive list! Thank you so much!
Lots of great link and info, Juliet! Thanks for sharing, have a great day!
Ain't technology grand???
A great list.. Thanks (even though I'm not in the UK).
A great list. I have also found the Marine Conservation Society folk very helpful ... here.
Thanks Caroline, I've added the MCS jellyfish guide to my list, that's the only guide that's available on their website as far as i can tell,
A fantastic list. Thanks!
In relation to bird songs and calls, xeno canto is an excellent site. You can stream the sound clip or embed it in your blog or website. I use it a lot on my blog.
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