Start Recording

Wildlife recording is identifying and sharing the presence of wildlife in any given area. It’s a powerful way to conserve local wildlife, generate scientific data and contribute towards the restoration of biodiversity across our area.

If you have a keen interest in wildlife and enjoy connecting with the natural world, wildlife recording could be for you. Also known as biological recording, wildlife recording is simply observing the wildlife you see, where and when you see it and sharing this with your Local Environmental Record Centre (LERC).

Across our area, around 3.5 million wildlife records have been generated by the volunteer recording community. These records help us and others to understand how species of wildlife are faring and how the climate crisis is affecting biodiversity across Wales. At BIS, we manage and share the records with those who really need it, including those who are making decisions about the environment.

Blue Tit © Keith Noble

What is a record?

A wildlife record is an observation of a species at a specified time and place by a named individual. There are four basic pieces of information that must be included:

What
Species name
Where
The location where the species was observed, including an OS grid reference
When
Date the species was observed
Who
Name of the person who observed it

Anyone can make a wildlife record regardless of their level of expertise. We need as many people as possible to contribute to records so that we can understand wildlife patterns and help improve outcomes for biodiversity. Recording the wildlife that you see is a really valuable way of contributing to conservation - if we don't know species are present then we can't do anything to protect them.

Volucella Zonaria © Keith Noble

Taking it further

There is further information that can be included beyond the four points above.

What
The species name can be the scientific name (sometime referred to as the Latin name) or the common name. The Natural History Museum maintains a list of all the species names in the UK called the UK Species Inventory. You can use it to look-up correct spelling and currently accepted names.
Where
The best way to reference the location you observe a species in the UK is to use an OS Grid reference. Grab a Grid Reference is a useful tool for looking up grid references. It is also good practice to include a location name with your observation, this a text reference to the location and could be the street, village or hillside.
When
The best practice is to include the full date. For some historic or retrospective records the observer may not be able to remember the exact date in which case a vague date such as the month or season is acceptable.
Who
This piece of information is important because it provides information to support verification of the record.
Optional information
These are often dictated by the type of species but could include things such as age or life stage (adult, juvenile, larvae), sex, abundance, growth form, notes on behaviour, breeding status, type of observation (moth trap, live sighting, droppings etc). Any information that can be observed and could be useful to know in the future.

Example wildlife record

Whilst on a walk in the local park Jenny noticed some Jelly ear fungus growing on an Elder tree.

What

Jelly Ear

Where

SO2118 Bullpit Meadow, Crickhowell

When

03/11/2023

Who

Jenny Davies

As this is an observation of two different species, it is actually two wildlife records, one of the fugus and one of the tree.

What

Elder

Where

SO2118 Bullpit Meadow, Crickhowell

When

03/11/2023

Who

Jenny Davies