• Search
  • About us
  • Jobs
  • Contact Us
  • Shop
  • Donate
  • Join Us
  • Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife
        • Wildlife Directory
      • Record Your Sighting
        • Nature Counts
      • Injured Animals & Emergencies
        • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
        • Reporting Wildlife Crime
        • Wildfire safety advice
        • The Countryside Code
      • Image of Wildlife in Sheffield and Rotherham Reserve
        Wildlife in Sheffield and Rotherham

        Take a look, through some of the common species of wildlife that live in the South Yorkshire area around Sheffield and Rotherham.

  • Our Work
      • News
        • Conservation
        • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
        • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
        • Nature Reserves
        • Partnerships
        • Nature Recovery
        • Campaigning & Appeals
        • Events & Activities
        • Videos
      • Nature Recovery Programmes
        • Nature Based Solutions
        • Rotherham Rivers
      • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
        • Green and Blue Social Prescribing
        • Wild at Heart
        • Nextdoor Nature
      • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
        • Primary and Early Years
        • Secondary Schools
        • Further and Higher Education
        • Training and support
      • Evidence-led Conservation
        • What is Evidence-Led Conservation?
        • Working with Nature: Woodhouse Washlands
      • Partnerships
        • South Yorkshire Woodland Partnership
        • South Yorkshire Local Nature Partnership
        • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
        • Sheffield Lakeland Partnership
      • Advice & Consultancy
        • Wildscapes
        • The BNG Hub
        • Land Management Advice Service
  • Nature Reserves
      • Nature Reserves in Sheffield
        • Blacka Moor
        • Carbrook Ravine
        • Carr House Meadows
        • Crabtree Ponds
        • Fox Hagg
        • Greno Woods
        • Moss Valley Woodlands
        • Salmon Pastures
        • Sunnybank
        • Wyming Brook
      • Nature Reserves in Rotherham
        • Woodhouse Washlands
        • Centenary Riverside
        • Kilnhurst Ings
      • Special Conservation Spaces
        • Agden Bog
        • Hammond’s Field
      • Nature Friendly Farming
        • Ughill Farm
      • Image of Fox Hagg Reserve
        Fox Hagg

        A recently extended patch of heathland and woodland, neighbouring Wyming Brook.

  • Events & Activities
      • What's On
        • Volunteer Work Days
        • Family Events
        • Guided Walks
        • Online Events
        • View All Events
      • Activities
        • 30 Days Wild
        • Activities for Children
        • Activities for Adults
        • Nature Detectives!
  • Get Involved
      • Nature Recovery
        • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
        • Nature Recovery Sheffield
        • Nature Recovery Rotherham
        • Sheffield Swift City
        • New Government Priorities for Nature
      • Volunteering
        • Volunteer with us
      • Campaigning for Wildlife
        • # Defend Nature
        • Action for Insects
        • Badgers and bTB
        • Birds of Prey
        • Go peat free!
        • Our Moors
        • Wilder Future
      • Image of Badgers and bTB Reserve
        Badgers and bTB

        Help stop the badger cull coming to Sheffield and Rotherham!

  • Support us
      • Become a Member
        • Individual Membership
        • Joint Membership
        • Family Membership
        • Gift a Membership
        • Renew your Membership
      • Corporate Partnerships
        • Corporate Membership
        • Wild Work Days
        • Employee Wellbeing Packages
      • Make a Donation
      • Appeals
        • Taking Action for Nature Appeal
        • Acorn Fund
      • A Gift in Your Will
        • A Gift in their Memory
        • How Gifts Can Help us
      • Image of Kingfisher Magazine Reserve
        Kingfisher Magazine

        Unveil the hidden world of insects in Sheffield & Rotherham with the newest issue of Kingfisher magazine.

  • Join Us
  • Donate
  • Online Shop
  • About us
  • Jobs
  • Wildlife
    • Wildlife Directory
    • Nature Counts
    • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
    • Reporting Wildlife Crime
    • Wildfire safety advice
    • The Countryside Code
  • Our Work
    • News
    • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
    • Evidence-led Conservation
    • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
    • South Yorkshire Woodland Partnership
    • South Yorkshire Local Nature Partnership
    • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
    • Sheffield Lakeland Partnership
    • Wildscapes
  • Nature Reserves
    • Agden Bog
    • Blacka Moor
    • Carbrook Ravine
    • Carr House Meadows
    • Crabtree Ponds
    • Fox Hagg
    • Greno Woods
    • Hammond’s Field
    • Moss Valley Woodlands
    • Salmon Pastures
    • Sunnybank
    • Wyming Brook
    • Woodhouse Washlands
    • Centenary Riverside
    • Kilnhurst Ings
    • Ughill Farm
  • Events & Activities
    • What's On
    • 30 Days Wild
    • Activities for Children
    • Activities for Adults
    • Nature Detectives!
  • Get Involved
    • Volunteer with us
    • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
    • Nature Recovery Sheffield
    • Nature Recovery Rotherham
    • Campaigning For Wildlife
  • Support us
    • Become a Member
      • Individual Membership
      • Family Membership
      • Joint Membership – Last chance!
      • Gift a Membership
    • Donate
  • Home
  • The Elms and Hairstreaks Initiative

Help create a resilient habitat for White-letter Hairstreak butterflies by purchasing a Dutch Elm Disease resistant sapling to plant, or donate for us to place one in a suitable location as part of our Elms and Hairstreaks Initiative!

Order an Elm sapling
Sponsor an Elm sapling

Thank you!

The initial allocation of elm saplings have now sold out. We hope to offer similar schemes in future so please check back soon. In the meantime, you can find more ways to take action for nature in our Nature Recover Community Toolkit.


About the Elms and Hairstreaks Initiative

The deadly Dutch Elm Disease (DED) has decimated nearly all of the UK’s large mature elm trees. Mature elms have their own unique biodiverse species mix of lichens and insects, many of which declined as elm trees have disappeared. The most famous species dependent solely on elms is the White-letter Hairstreak butterfly, whose abundance has declined by up to 78% in England since 1976*.

Now Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust and Nether Edge & Sharrow Sustainable Transformation (NESST) are working together in partnership (supported by Sheffield City Council) on the Elms and Hairstreaks Initiative which aims to make our region a place where both species can thrive again.

Half a century of research and breeding in specialist nurseries has produced DED resistant elm trees. We have purchased 50 DED saplings, and we want you to help us plant them here!

Photograph: © Ben Keywood

*The UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme & State of UK Butterflies

Close-up of a white-letter hairstreak butterfly
© white letter hairstreak b keywood

How it works

Participate in the initiative and help plant a young elm sapling – in your garden, on your land, or even in one of our nature reserves – and you could transform the fortunes of both the elm and the hairstreak!

To purchase an Elm to plant yourself:

(If you don’t have space to plant an elm of your own, choose the ‘donate an elm’ option below)

Order your DED Resistant sapling(s)

Online ordering is available via our Eventbrite, booking one of the below timeslots to collect. The price of each sapling is just £20 (plus Eventbrite fees).

Collect your sapling

Bring your e-ticket during your chosen timeslot to collect your tree sapling. Collection is from Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust, Victoria Hall, 37 Stafford Road, Sheffield, S2 2SF.

The saplings are approximately 2.5 metres tall, and have the potential to grow to 30 metres tall with a 8m wide canopy in maturity! Please arrange suitable transport (e.g. flatten back seats of a car). Bringing a large bag such as a binbag is advisable to wrap the muddy base of the saplings.

Plant your Elm tree sapling

Plant in a suitable location and allow it to grow. Elm grows best in well-drained soil in hedgerows and woodland. It is really important that you let us know during the checkout process where you plan to locate it, so we can map and record DED resistant Elm locations across the city.

Record your wildlife sightings

Over the coming years we aim to evaluate the success of the initiative by recording the population of White-letter Hairstreak butterflies and other species, and would appreciate you helping us to do so by recording your sightings to the Nature Counts database via our website.

Currently Sold Out – Check Back Again Soon
Lady stood next to an elm tree sapling for size reference for the Elms and Hairstreaks Initiative

To sponsor an Elm:

Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust, NESST and Sheffield City Council have worked together to identify locations where DED resistent Elm trees would be beneficial.

For those unable to plant a sapling in their own garden or land, we are giving you the opportunity to donate the cost to enable us to do so.

Simply click the link to purchase a sapling, and we’ll take care of the rest!

Favoured sites to plant donated saplings are Greno Woods, Carbrook Ravine and Carr House Meadows nature reserves (Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust) and Norfolk Park (Sheffield City Council). High Hazels Park, Lynwood Gardens and Clay Wood are reserve sites to complement Sheffield City Council’s own planting of resistant elm trees.

Currently Sold Out – Check Back Again Soon

Together we can increase the population of the White-letter Hairstreak butterfly!

Nature Natters: Elms and Hairstreaks

Watch our Nature Natters event for more information on the Elms and Hairstreaks Initiative and more!

Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust butterfly expert Ben Keywood and Paul Selby, chair of Nether Edge and Sharrow Sustainable Transformation (NESST), offer a fascinating look at the relationship between the rare White-letter Hairstreak butterfly and Elm trees; and how you may be able to help both!

Elms and Hairstreaks Initiative FAQs

Download the document below for answers to some of the questions you might have about the projects. For any further questions, please get in touch by emailing takeaction@wildsheffield.com.

White-letter Hairstreak and Resistant Elm Initiative – WhyDownload

About the White-letter Hairstreak butterfly

The White-letter Hairstreak (Satyrium w-album) butterfly is so called because of the markings on its wings that suggest a scrawled letter ‘w’ (indeed it has previously been called the White w-Hairstreak). This helps to distinguish this butterfly from other hairstreaks such as the Black. The White-letter Hairstreak is a species that thrives in the high canopy of mature elm trees, drawing on nectar from flowers and laying eggs on small branches to overwinter.

There has been a marked decline in the abundance of White-letter Hairstreak, estimated as a loss of 99% of the population over 25 years (1984-2003 Defra/JNCC UK Priority Species Report). Being a high canopy butterfly, it can make it difficult to spot this elusive butterfly and assess population changes but given the loss of mature English elms from England in the 1970s onwards, it is not surprising to see such a decline in this species. The White-letter Hairstreak butterfly is endangered and on the Butterfly Red Data List for the UK.

About Elm trees

Elm trees support a wide variety of species, lichens, mosses and insects, including the White-letter Hairstreak butterfly. But elm trees have been and continue to be in trouble.

Mature English Elms (Ulmas major) were once common on the rich farmed soils of middle England but are now rarely found as trees and are more common as hedgerow shrubs. This decline is a likely result of the ravaging effects of a recent wave of Dutch elm disease which has affected all the UK’s elms, killing many mature trees and preventing new trees from growing.

Many mature trees have been lost, but elms still cling on, in part due to their ability to easily form new varieties and reproduce by both seed and sucker.

How to identify

  • Height: 16-30m
  • Elms can be recognised by their asymmetrical oval leaves, toothed around the edges, with very short stalks, as well as their winged fruit. English Elm has smaller, rounder leaves than Wych Elm.

Contact Us

Call us: 0114 263 4335

Find us: Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust, 37 Stafford Road, Sheffield S2 2SF

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
    • Nature Reserves
      • Nature Recovery Sheffield
      • Nature Recovery Rotherham
      • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
    • Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
      • Reporting Wildlife Crime
    • About us
      • Who We Are
      • What We Do
      • Contact Us
      • Events & Activities
      • News
      • Work For Us
      • Wildscapes
      • The BNG Hub
    • Support Us
      • Become a Member
      • Corporate Support
      • Make a Donation
      • A Gift in Your Will
      • Kingfisher Magazine
    • Get Involved
      • Volunteer with us
      • Campaigning For Wildlife
      • Nature Recovery Sheffield
    • Online Shop
      • Online Shop Size Guides
      • Online Shop Delivery Information
      • Online Shop Terms, Delivery & Returns
  • © 2025 Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust
  • Registered in England Number 2287928. Registered Charity Number 700638.
  • Privacy Notice
  • Design By Ink & Water
Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}