Wildife and Bird Watching in Suffolk
These maps are intended as a guideline only; you must check the exact location of the reserve yourself. Wildlife Extra assumes no responsibility for the accuracy or usefulness of the information on this website.
Recent Suffolk news
- Dormice found on Suffolk reserve for the first time
- Suffolk kingfisher migrated from Poland
- Bittern recovery in UK continues as numbers rise again
- David Shepherd to talk at WildlifeXpo
- Wicken Fen to launch National Dragonfly Week
- Major new wildlife exhibition launched in London
- Budget-tightening threat to stone curlew’s resurgence
- Norfolk’s biodiversity hotspot revealed
- Britain’s bittern population is booming
- Natural England withdraws funding from white-tailed eagle reintroduction project
- Blow for Suffolk’s eagle reintroduction plans
- Sea eagles - Let's have them all over the country - Your vote.
- Are Sea eagles coming back to Suffolk? Vote on what you think should happen
- Reintroducing rare or locally extinct animals back into England
More Suffolk news
- Reedbeds in the UK – Scarce and endangered
- Suffolk coastal sites being assessed for possible release of white-tailed eagles
- Record year for Bitterns in UK
- Woodlark populations suppressed by high level ofpredation
- 1000 Sandwich terns settle at Minsmere
- Best year for bitterns for 130 years in Britain
- Very Rare Crucifix ground beetle rediscovered at Wicken Fen
- New UK moth record at Wicken Fen
- New Minsmere heathland attracts rare Silver-studded blue butterfly
- Minsmere moths and butterflies.
- Minsmere 60th anniversary
- RSPB Minsmere and Dingle Marshes damaged by surge tides
- RSPB disappointed by lack of prosecution over Sandringham hen harrier shootings
- Bitterns breeding in the Fens for the first time for 70 years
Are Sea eagles coming back to Suffolk? Vote on what you think should happenIn any debate about conservation, it is always important to discount 10% of the arguments at either end of the range, as some people will support all conservation, no matter what the cost or practicalities, and others would complain about spending 5 Euros to save the last elephant. Somewhere in the middle is a rational debate and, usually, the right answer.
Read more »
September 2007. The recovery of the bittern, took a small step forward with news that, despite flood problems, male bitterns were recorded at more sites than any other year since 1990.
Read more »

