British Wildlife Rehabilitation Council (@bwrc_uk) 's Twitter Profile
British Wildlife Rehabilitation Council

@bwrc_uk

Our mission is to promote the welfare of wildlife casualties both whilst in captivity and after release back into the wild.

ID: 1135550089336971268

linkhttp://bwrc.org.uk/ calendar_today03-06-2019 14:13:33

75 Tweet

126 Followers

15 Following

British Wildlife Rehabilitation Council (@bwrc_uk) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If you haven’t yet done so - please do complete our survey: “Effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on the work of UK Wildlife Rehabilitators” at shorturl.at/cgpwD . We aim to present the results of this work at Symposium 2020 on 21st November (details for that coming soon!).

British Wildlife Rehabilitation Council (@bwrc_uk) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Join us at the online BWRC Symposium 21.11.20! Tickets available £20-£40 at eventbrite.co.uk/e/bwrc-symposi…. Full programme to be confirmed!

Join us at the online BWRC Symposium 21.11.20! Tickets available £20-£40 at eventbrite.co.uk/e/bwrc-symposi…. Full programme to be confirmed!
British Wildlife Rehabilitation Council (@bwrc_uk) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Also at the Symposium! Two new studies on UK wildlife casualty admissions, cat predation of British wildlife, coccidiosis in hedgehogs, ethical dilemmas in wildlife rehabilitation, how to get involved in scientific research & the early impact of the COVID-19 on UK rehabilitators.

BBC Somerset (@bbcsomerset) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This makes us sad 😞🦢 RSPCA (England & Wales) West Hatch said it will take "quite a lot of Fairy Liquid to get the swan clean" 🧼 bbc.co.uk/news/uk-englan…

British Wildlife Rehabilitation Council (@bwrc_uk) 's Twitter Profile Photo

BWRC are pleased to publish a joint statement with partner organisations to provide advice on why breeding for release is not an appropriate strategy to fight the decline of native wild hedgehogs. It will be available on websites of the cosignatories listed on the image below!

BWRC are pleased to publish a joint statement with partner organisations to provide advice on why breeding for release is not an appropriate strategy to fight the decline of native wild hedgehogs.
It will be available on websites of the cosignatories listed on the image below!