BBC Wildlife Magazine is a celebration of the natural world, featuring all the latest discoveries, news and views on wildlife, conservation and environmental issues. With strong broadcasting links, authoritative journalism and award-winning photography, BBC Wildlife Magazine is essential reading for anyone with a passion for wildlife who wants to understand, experience and enjoy nature more.
How to connect with nature and benefit your health
Return to the land that time forgot
BBC Wildlife Magazine
Every month, only in BBC Wildlife
Wild TIMES • What’s happening right now
Love is in the air • A surprise encounter with a pair of courting turacos delivered a winning shot
Book a date with badgers • Now is the time to join an organised watch for the chance to see curious cubs
Great apes seek thrills by spinning • Ape behaviour gives clues to why humans chase mind-altering stimulation
Culture club • Bumblebees can learn from each other, creating culture within colonies
Songs from the reedbed • Visit a wetland to hear the chatter of a summer visitor
Swim a rainbow
The shiny, sun-loving show-off • Spot this day-flying moth in open areas in May and June
ORIGIN OF PIECES • A kangaroo’s pouch
GILLIAN BURKE • “What if we swapped the word ‘nature’ for ‘our home’? ”
MAGICAL MAYFLIES
10 poisonous fungi
New seabird illness
Carmela Buono • Preserve manager at Hudson Highlands Land Trust on beneficial interactions between species
Geese take a gander • Pink-footed geese have scouted out new breeding grounds in response to a changing Arctic climate
Cyrtodactylus santana
Swedish cull controversy
Lost & Found • Smalltooth sand tiger shark, Hampshire
DUCKS IN A ROW
Dusty tetraka seen after 24-year gap
There’s the grub • Biologists have finally identified the ‘worm’ in mezcal bottles
COLLECTIVE NOUNS • A dray of squirrels
A rosy future? • Roseate terns are back this month – but they face an uncertain fate
FEMALE OF THE SPECIES • Lucy Cooke on how social standing affects primate maternal success
Purple prize • Resist mowing your lawn this month and bugle could bloom
POO CORNER • European bison
MARK CARWARDINE • “It’s just a small but influential group who drive Japan’s whaling interests”
Woodcocks are a whiter shade of pale • These waders sport the whitest feathers known to science – but they like to keep them under wraps
Thunderbirds
NEXT ISSUE
SPINNING AROUND • Watch puffns form swirling roundabouts in the sky as they prepare to come ashore
GOOD VIBRATIONS • The delicate garden insect that sends out a seductive song and duets with its mating partner
BBCwildlife • Save when you subscribe to the digital edition
BUTTERFLY BRITAIN • Five years spent roaming the country in search of all 58 native species yielded a trove of insightful images
Claim your freeissue • Here’s your chance to sample an issue of Gardens Illustrated – the world’s most beautiful gardens magazine – absolutely free
TURTLE BEACH • The sandy shore of a sleepy fishing village in Trinidad hosts the highest concentration of nesting leatherbacks to be found anywhere on the planet
Meet the sea turtles • Seven species of these charismatic reptiles roam the planet’s oceans and the leatherback is the largest and oldest
“Fret is always there, nagging like the itch of a horsefly bite” • With devastating biodiversity losses and a climate in chaos, it’s not surprising that we are increasingly anxious about the state of our planet
BACK IN BLACK • Rearing and...