Secret Government negotiations to dispose of England's most precious wildlife sites in a big money-saving exercise are in tatters.
    		  Wildlife charities which the Government had assumed would take over the   running of 140 national nature reserves are refusing to do so without new   funding, which would run into many millions of pounds. Their insistence on a   big cash injection as a condition of any transfer may mean the whole idea   will be scrapped.  
    The reserves, which range from the Lizard in Cornwall to Lindisfarne in   Northumberland, and in size from three-quarters of an acre at Horn Park   Quarry in Dorset to 22,000 acres of the Wash, represent many of the finest   wildlife sites in the country. There are 224 of them, 140 run by the   Government's wildlife agency, Natural England. Harbouring such distinctive   habitats as ancient woodland, chalk grassland and lowland heath, and   sheltering rare species such as nightingales, orchids and red squirrels, the   reserves are regarded as the jewels in the crown of British nature   conservation.  
        Since the election, however, Conservative ministers from the Department for   Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) have been trying to get rid of   the sites run by Natural England. Ministers have been engaged in   confidential talks to try to get several wildlife charities to take over the   running of the reserves.  
    Initially, ministers wanted to sell the nature reserves outright, but quickly   found there were no takers. So for several months they have been talking   about handing them over to the National Trust, the Royal Society for the   Protection of Birds, the Wildlife Trusts Partnership, the Wildfowl and   Wetlands Trust, the Woodland Trust, Butterfly Conservation and Plantlife.  
    These charities do not object in principle to taking on the reserves, and all   have the necessary expertise to run them. However, they have raised a number   of objections, the key one being money, and in a written warning to Defra,   the charities state that "Government must ensure sustainable funding   packages are in place to support delivery throughout the length of service   delivery agreements". Translation: you will have to pick up the cost   for the whole length of the time we run one of your former nature reserves.  
    There is a further financial caveat: the charities insist that the government   must comply with regulations which safeguard staff when their jobs are   transferred. This means that the Government will have to guarantee the   salaries and pension arrangements of Natural England employees now managing   the reserves, which are likely to be more generous than those prevailing in   the charities.  
    The full cost to Natural England of running its reserves is £9.9m annually:   this is made up of £4.5m for maintenance and other running costs, and £5.4m   in staff costs. If the wildlife charities together insist on a similar sum   for taking on the reserves, the potential savings will simply disappear.   Some observers think this puts the whole idea in jeopardy. A senior   government source admitted that it was now having to "think through   lots of different funding models".  
    Yet money is not the only hurdle. The charities are also insisting on a strict   regime of safeguards for any reserves which are transferred, or for any of   the landholdings of the Forestry Commission which the Coalition plans to   sell off. They say that there should be "no net loss of biodiversity,   heritage significance or public access" as a result of the transfer of   land.   
    The charities' tough conditions have emerged because their document, which has   not been officially published, has been made available on the website of the   wildflower charity Plantlife, and this is the first public acknowledgement   of the discussions which have been going on. Victoria Chester, Plantlife's   chief executive, said the charities were all agreed that the Government had   to be involved in funding.   
    England's most precious wildlife sites  
    The Lizard  
    The Lizard national nature reserve in Cornwall is a remarkable mixture of   habitats, from majestic cliffs and beaches to coastal grassland and inland   heaths. The wildlife star is the chough, the crow with a red bill which is   also the county bird of Cornwall. In spring the swaths of cliff-top wild   flowers are breathtaking and the heaths are ablaze with colour in summer.  
      The Wash  
    England's largest nature reserve is one of the country's last great   wildernesses, an internationally important wetland site in Norfolk and   Lincolnshire whose mudflats and saltmarshes represent one of Britain's best   winter feeding areas for waders and wildfowl. Its star species include   waders and one of the largest breeding colonies of seal in the UK.  
    Lindisfarne  
    The Northumbrian island of Lindisfarne, or Holy Island, has a twinfold   importance: its monastery was one of the key sites of early Celtic   Christianity and it is a superb wildlife site. Its most typical habitat is   the sand dunes which in summer are alive with orchids and insects. Its   special birds are wintering wildfowl and waders, including pale-bellied   brent geese from Svalbard, wigeons, grey plovers and bar-tailed godwits.  
      Horn Park Quarry  
    Britain's smallest national nature reserve has been listed for its geology:   the disused limestone quarry, once worked for local building stone, contains   preserved fossils from the Inferior Oolite, which dates from the Middle   Jurassic period, particularly ammonites. Public visits to the site can be   arranged.