clipped from: www.guardian.co.uk   

A third miserable summer in parts of the UK could spell disaster for many species of insects, birdlife and mammals, the National Trust warns today.

The charity says three wet summers in a row in many regions could mean that creatures - ranging from craneflies (often called daddy-long-legs) to species of butterflies, members of the tit family, puffins and bats - may struggle to survive in some places.


"Climate change is not some future prediction of what might happen. It's happening now and having a serious impact on our countryside every year."

The warning comes in a yearly audit produced by the National Trust of how the weather in 2008 affected wildlife