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<p>Domestic biodiversity policy is a devolved matter and the information provided
relates to England only, except in relation to our plans internationally.</p><p> </p><p>The
UK Government is taking a range of steps to both halt and reverse species decline.</p><p>
</p><p>We protect a wide variety of our most threatened native species through the
Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulation
2017. These laws make it an offence to intentionally kill, injure or capture listed
species, as well as damage or destroy breeding sites.</p><p> </p><p>Our agencies and
non-Departmental bodies are working on species recovery projects with landowning and
conservation partners, for example on freshwater pearl mussel, short-haired bumblebee
and stone curlew.</p><p> </p><p> </p><p>Our 25 Year Environment Plan steps up our
ambition further, setting long-term goals for recovering nature and setting out over
200 actions to enhance the environment including developing a Nature Recovery Network
which will provide an expanding and increasingly connected network of places for wildlife
to thrive. Our National Pollinator Strategy sets out actions to tackle risks to insect
populations, such as habitat loss and fragmentation, invasive species, pests and disease
and climate change. We are supporting science-led restrictions on neonicotinoids,
have introduced agri-environment packages to support farmers to put wild flowers back
into fields, and continue to tackle threats from invasive species such as the Asian
hornet. We have also consulted on an ambitious third tranche of 41 Marine Conservation
Zones. Sites to be designated in this tranche will be announced and in place by 7
June.</p><p> </p><p>The ongoing declines in nature are a global problem that need
a global solution. That is why the UK is committed to playing a leading role in developing
a global post-2020 framework under the Convention on Biological Diversity that is
ambitious and transformational. Our Darwin Initiative supports global action by providing
grants to protect biodiversity and the natural environment, with £10.6 million awarded
in 2018. Defra has contributed almost £6 million over the last three years to Darwin
Plus for Overseas Territories’ biodiversity. We continue to support activities to
end poaching and the illegal wildlife trade, and have recently passed new legislation
to close our domestic ivory market, which will be the toughest ivory ban in Europe
and one of the toughest in the world. The UK Government has committed to protecting
the ocean and has called for at least 30 per cent of the ocean to be in Marine Protected
Areas by 2030.</p><p> </p>
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