Leicester Literary and Philosophical Society

Providing lectures at the cutting edge
of modern thinking since 1835

Natural History Section Logo with a picture of a badger's head  Natural History Section

2026/27 Indoor Meetings Programme

Free to members and under-25s, £5 charge to other visitors

Meetings are held at the Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP (link to map).  Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm.  Advance registration is not required. We encourage you to join rather than paying for meetings at the door, as you benefit from access to email updates and our newsletter as well as the ability to attend members-only outdoor meetings.

If you are looking for meetings of the main Lit&Phil, you can find these on the Events page.

Note that the first meeting of the new season is on the second Wednesday of October rather than the usual first Wednesday.

Upcoming Indoor Meetings

    • 14 Oct 2026
    • 19:30 - 21:30
    • Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP


    Born and bred in Nottingham Jack is primarily a freelance underwater and wildlife cameraman with a deep passion for the natural world. He’s particularly interested in the less liked species such as reptiles, amphibians and fish but does occasionally pay attention to furry and feathery things.  He has a BA (Hons) Marine & Natural History Photography. 

    Shortly after graduating Jack focused more on moving image and has since worked for dozens of wildlife and angling TV programmes including Springwatch, The One Show, Mr Crabtree Goes Fishing and The Great British Year. Jack also appears in front of the camera and has presented several films for Countryfile. He's gone on to work on David Attenborough's "Wild Isles" and Filmed in Alaska for a BBC series.

    Freshwater fish are certainly what Jack is best known for being termed the “fish twitcher” by the BBC for hunting around the UK to film every British freshwater fish a task that took seven years for him to complete and find all 54. For Scottish Lochs to Southern Chalkstreams there aren’t many waterways Jack hasn’t dipped in. This is the subject that he will be talking about on 14th October.

    Jack has written two books "Freshwater Fishes of Britain" and "Field Guide to Pond & River Wildlife of Britain & Europe”. His Field Guide to British Fish will be published by Bloomsbury in April 2027.

    His website is https://www.jackperksphotography.com/.

    Quaker Meeting House - link to map

    Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm. Note that this meeting is on the second Wednesday of October rather than the usual first Wednesday.

    (Photo at top courtesy Jack Perks)

    • 4 Nov 2026
    • 19:30 - 21:30
    • Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP

    Photo of meadow flowersI have been a section member since 1982, since when I have developed an interest in many aspects of natural history. Botanical fieldwork has occupied most of my time, initially in the Charnwood area, but more recently all over vice-county 55, to even-up coverage for the national Atlas 2020 project. This entailed many trips to Rutland, ably assisted by Helen Ikin.

    I have given the Sowter Lecture twice before, on the Landscape History of Groby, and on Bryophytes. Among my publications are studies of Ulverscroft, Swithland Wood, Grace Dieu and Oakham. In 2022 I helped Geoffrey Hall to prepare the Rare Plant Register for VC55. The talk will cover the flowering plants and ferns of Leicestershire and Rutland, drawing attention to the similarities and differences.

    This will be the Sowter Lecture for the 2026-27 season of talks. More can be found about Frederick Sowter here. 

    Quaker Meeting House - link to map

    Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm.

    • 2 Dec 2026
    • 19:30 - 21:30
    • Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP

    Dr Moya Burns is Associate Professor Ecology and Environmental Science in the School of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Division of Biosciences Education. 

    She is an ecologist with a varied past working in ecological consultancy, government agencies and the charity sector before joining the University of Leicester. Her work encompasses interdisciplinary themes around ecology, citizen/community science and environmental education, and she is interested in exploring how embedding citizen science approaches within the curriculum can support environmental decision‑making whilst giving students authentic experience in research and ecological survey skills. She co‑leads the Living with Environmental Change research challenge in the Institute for Environmental Futures

    Quaker Meeting House - link to map

    Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm.

    • 6 Jan 2027
    • 19:30 - 21:30
    • Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP

    Photo of a greenfinch at a feederEven though some surveys indicate that more than half of UK households feed their locaI birds, providing a national total of 150,000 tonnes of bird food every year, recent research has concluded that such artificial feeding may be at best ineffective and at worst harmful to wild bird populations, for example by spreading disease. 

    I am not a professional researcher in this field, but I have had a strong interest in garden birds for many years, and I have been following closely the debate over garden bird feeding. 

    Rather than giving intrusive advice telling people how (or whether) to feed their local birds, the aim of this talk is to present the evidence and allow the audience to decide for themselves whether feeding is a triumph or a tragedy. The talk will be in two parts – firstly reviewing the evidence that feeding may be harmful and presenting the case that all feeding should be abandoned; and secondly reviewing evidence to the contrary and asking whether (in spite of recent criticism) such feeding is still valuable in conserving the UK’s threatened bird populations and, if so, under what circumstances.

    Quaker Meeting House - link to map

    Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm.

    (Photo of Greenfinch: Alan Bevington)

    • 3 Feb 2027
    • 19:30 - 21:30
    • Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP

    Hannah O'Regan is Professor of Archaeology and Palaeoecology in the Faculty of Arts at Nottingham University.

    She is particularly known for her work on carnivores - from sabretoothed cats to brown bears - and their interactions with humans through time. Her specialism is in the bones of humans and other animals - osteology - but she also uses archives, inscriptions, sculpture and many other sources of evidence to piece together life in the past.

    The work on bears relates to an NERC funded research project 'The decline of the bear: tracing the extinction of Britain's largest carnivore'.

    Quaker Meeting House - link to map

    Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm.

    • 3 Mar 2027
    • 19:30 - 21:30
    • Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP

    Alan Cann is a member of the Natural History Section well-known for his studies of the smaller taxa, for example Springtails. He has a long-standing interest in macro photography and will explore the tiny microworlds of Leicestershire wildlife, and discuss the methods used and resulting images. 

    Quaker Meeting House - link to map

    Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm.

    • 8 Mar 2027
    • 19:30 - 21:00
    • Leicester Museum & Art Gallery, 53 New Walk, Leicester, LE1 7EA
    • 100


    image supplied by the speaker




    Natural History Section Joint Lecture

    Professor George Holmes PhD 

    Professor of Conservation and Society, University of Leeds








    Lecture outline

    Britain is nature-depleted, an island whose seas make repletion difficult. To restore nature, conservationists are giving a helping hand by seeking to release many species to create new populations, from beavers and eagles to burbot fish, northern hairy wood ants, and lungwort lichens. These reintroductions are often presented as simple tales of fixing a problem, but they are a difficult, contested, and value-laden. They are not just technical or scientific actions, but rather a philosophical, legal, moral, and socio-economic challenge. Most of all, they open up a series of questions about what British nature should look like, who decides, on what basis, and about what the relationships should be between humans and non-humans in Britain. This talk will take us through a variety of species being reintroduced, from the massive to the microscopic, to explore what this tells us about Britain’s relationship with nature.

    Biographical note

    George Holmes is Professor of Conservation and Society at the University of Leeds. His work looks at the people and politics side of conservation, specifically the values, beliefs and structures of the conservation movement, and how conservation projects and local communities interact and shape one another. A lot of his current focused on rewilding, species reintroductions, and landscape restoration.

    Attending the lecture

    The lecture is open both to members of the Society and to guests.

    The lecture will take place in the Leicester Museum & Art Gallery, New Walk https://www.leicestermuseums.org/leicester-museum-art-gallery/

    The hall will be open from 6:45 and tea and coffee drinks will be available between 7.00pm and 7.15pm before the formal start of the event at 7.30pm.

    The lecture will also be streamed on Zoom. A recording of the lecture may be available to members only.


    • 7 Apr 2027
    • 19:30 - 21:30
    • Quaker Meeting House, 16 Queens Road, Leicester LE2 1WP

    The Section's AGM will be followed by refreshments and a chance to meet and talk with other members, after which a few short talks will be given by members.

    Quaker Meeting House - link to map

    Doors open 7 pm for start at 7.30 pm, finish by 9.30 pm. Note that this meeting is not on the first Wednesday of the month.

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