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Home / Environment / Photographer's Haunting Images Warn of Wildlife's Vanishing Future

Photographer's Haunting Images Warn of Wildlife's Vanishing Future

18 Oct

•

Summary

  • Margot Raggett has raised £1.2m for conservation efforts in the past 10 years
  • Her latest book features altered images of animals scrubbed from natural habitats
  • Raggett calls for a "massive pause" on UK's accelerated housebuilding plans
Photographer's Haunting Images Warn of Wildlife's Vanishing Future

In October 2025, wildlife photographer Margot Raggett is sounding the alarm on the rapid decline of animal populations around the world. Over the past decade, Raggett has raised £1.2 million for conservation efforts through her Remembering Wildlife series, an annual picture book featuring images from top nature photographers. However, she now feels "nervous about the future" as global efforts to tackle the climate crisis have stalled.

Raggett's latest release, titled "Ten Years of Remembering Wildlife," includes original and altered images of animals like polar bears, cheetahs, and pangolins being "scrubbed out" of their natural habitats. These provocative visuals are intended to give a glimpse of a future where these landscapes could be devoid of wild creatures. "The rate of wildlife decline is so rapid across the world and there's a lot of work to be done to reverse it," Raggett warns.

Closer to home, Raggett is also concerned about the UK government's plans to build 1.5 million homes by the end of its first term. Ministers have instructed the Environment Agency to approve planning applications with minimal resistance, a move that has dismayed environmental campaigners. Raggett calls for a "massive pause" on these "short-sighted" housebuilding plans, arguing that there are enough brownfield sites that should be redeveloped before losing more countryside. "We've lost so much already," she says.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Margot Raggett's Remembering Wildlife project is an annual, not-for-profit picture book series featuring images of animals from the world's top nature photographers. Raggett has raised £1.2 million for conservation efforts through this project over the past 10 years.
The UK government has pledged to build 1.5 million homes by the end of its first term, and has instructed the Environment Agency to approve planning applications with minimal resistance. Conservationist Margot Raggett calls for a "massive pause" on these "short-sighted" plans, arguing that more countryside will be lost and that there are enough brownfield sites that should be redeveloped first.
Raggett's latest book, "Ten Years of Remembering Wildlife," features original and altered images of animals like polar bears, cheetahs, and pangolins being "scrubbed out" of their natural habitats. These provocative visuals are intended to give a glimpse of a future where these landscapes could be devoid of wild creatures if action is not taken to reverse the rapid decline of animal populations around the world.

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