• 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
  • Get Involved
  • Tree felling and wildlife protection

Tree felling and wildlife protection

Information about tree felling, potential wildlife impacts and how to report any concerns.

© Nicky Rivers - Lime trees, Nether Edge, Sheffield
  • Campaigning For Wildlife
  • Green and Blue Social Prescribing
  • Local community groups
  • Nature Adventures
  • Nature Friendly Gardening
  • Nature Recovery Rotherham
  • Nature Recovery Sheffield
  • Planning Issues
  • Planning Issues
  • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
  • Tree felling and wildlife protection
  • Volunteer with us
  • Wildlife Gardening

Trees are vital habitats for wildlife, providing many different species with shelter and food. They also form an important part of our landscapes, offering valuable benefits for recreation, wellbeing and natural flood management. 

Trees need management – for safety, habitat improvements or simply to ensure their continued good health. But this needs to be done responsibly, ideally at the right time of year and most importantly, legally.

Getting permission

Before anyone can cut down trees, they may need to get a felling licence from the Forestry Commission – and it is an offence to fell trees without a licence where one would have been required. For more information on this, we recommend consulting the Forestry Commission publication Tree Felling: Getting Permission

There are some circumstances where a felling licence isn’t needed:

  • felling trees in gardens, churchyards or a public open space
  • felling trees with a diameter less than 8cm (the width of a baked bean can) at a height of 1.3m on the main stem
  • felling trees to prevent the spread of a quarantine pest or disease, as required under a Statutory Plant Health Notice
  • up to 5 cubic metres of timber (a stack of timber the size of a small car) may be felled each calendar quarter without a felling licence.

If you have concerns about tree felling, have ruled out the above exemptions and suspect anyone of deliberate damage or cutting down of trees without permission, then you should report the incident to the Forestry Commission.

Tree Preservation Orders

Tree Preservation Orders (TPO) are made by the local planning authority (LPA), usually a local council, under the Town and Country Planning (Tree Preservation) (England) Regulations 2012. They protect specific trees and areas of woodland of high amenity value from deliberate damage and destruction.

A TPO can be placed on any tree and can also apply to woodland, although this is less common. They are most commonly used for urban/semi-urban settings, for trees with high ‘amenity’ or ‘nature conservation value’. If a tree or woodland is protected by a TPO, anyone wishing to carry out management work or remove the tree will need permission from the council.

If you would like to place a TPO on a tree or wood, you should firstly contact the relevant council and ask to speak to their tree officer. Explain to them why you feel the tree needs to be protected – TPOs are usually placed on a tree or wood which is considered be a local amenity. TPOs are a discretionary power – the council is not required to place a TPO on any tree. But where a TPO is made, the council has a duty to enforce it.

Trees can also be protected within Conservation Areas. For more information about this, use the following links to Sheffield City Council’s website or Rotherham Council’s website.

If you are planning to fell trees, you should firstly contact the relevant council to find out if these designations apply. If you wish to fell a tree or trees that are protected by a TPO, and an exception for a felling licence applies – for example, because you are carrying out works on a garden tree – then you will not need a felling licence. However, you are still likely to need to apply for permission to fell protected trees. In either case, we strongly recommend you consult the statutory guidance from the Forestry Commission.

Planning permission

When a planning application is submitted for development on an area of land that features trees, the applicant is usually required to carry out a tree survey. This should be undertaken by a qualified, professional aboriculturalist and will provide key details such the species, quantities and condition of any trees on the site, as well as the surveyor’s recommendations for the retention or removal of any trees. If the trees are within the planned footprint of the development they are likely to be felled if the application is granted, but should be mitigated for through replacement planting and/or other habitat provision elsewhere on the site. The applicant will normally need to apply separately for any TPOs to be removed.

If any impact upon protected species is anticipated, this will require a license from Natural England or Defra, and a management plan to be provided which will evidence how the impacts of this work will avoid harm or disturbance of protected species, or mitigate for this.

For more information about planning issues, click here.

Bird nesting season and protected species

Bird nesting season takes place from March to August each year. This can depend on the weather and some birds do nest outside of this period, so it is always advisable to conduct a check of trees prior to any work to ensure no nest is present. Although it is not always illegal to fell during the bird nesting season, precautions must be taken by law – and some species’ nests have protection all year round. Before any tree felling begins, the person undertaking the work should carefully assess the risks and how the felling will impact on resident wildlife populations and associated habitats. It is important to recognise that nesting disturbance can be from work taking place in the area and not just the tree being worked on.

Bats also roost in trees, and they are protected from disturbance by law. Unlike birds, bats use the same roost year after year, so the roost is protected all the time, even if the bats are not in it. Bats can often roost at the top of trees, which would require an aerial inspection to confirm the roost.

We strongly recommend seeking the advice of a suitably qualified aboriculturalist and ecologist before any work on trees is carried out, as expert advice and surveys may be required. Our environmental consultancy Wildscapes offer these services. 

Tree felling must be carried out by a competent person, who should carefully assess the risks and whether the work will impact on any resident wildlife and associated habitats before any work takes place. They must ensure that protected species are not intentionally harmed or killed, that nests or roosts are not damaged or destroyed and that wildlife habitats are safeguarded from permanent and lasting damage.

Work to trees can take place at any time of year – but it is an offence to intentionally damage or destroy an active nest of a wild bird under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. If this occurs, it should be reported to the police as it is a criminal offence.

Other legislation relevant includes:
  • Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000 (CROW Act)
  • Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006 (NERC)

For more information about reporting wildlife crime, click here. For clarity, if the nest is inactive or if regular garden birds are observed perching, feeding or resting in the tree, this would not be illegal.

Of course, illegal felling or deliberate damage isn’t something that only takes place in domestic gardens. These issues relate just as much to street trees, trees in parks or on other council owned land, rail network sites and other landowners too. In Sheffield we have developed a Street Tree Partnership Strategy which sets out guidance and direction for the management and maintenance of Sheffield’s street trees.

If you have any concerns about illegal tree felling or threats to wildlife and would like to get in touch, email takeaction@wildsheffield.com or call us on 0114 263 4335.

Get Involved

In This Section

  • Campaigning For Wildlife
  • Green and Blue Social Prescribing
  • Local community groups
  • Nature Adventures
  • Nature Friendly Gardening
  • Nature Recovery Rotherham
  • Nature Recovery Sheffield
  • Planning Issues
  • Planning Issues
  • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
  • Tree felling and wildlife protection
  • Volunteer with us
  • Wildlife Gardening

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}