Here is a look at some of the key items in the bill.
The images, including battling birds and squabbling squirrels, showed just what could be found "under our noses", said Andrew Fusek Peters."I wanted to celebrate the everyday stories and reveal the beauty of our birds, mammals and insects that live alongside us," the Shropshire photographer added.
Hundreds of his images feature in a new book.The majority of the photographs were taken in his "modest" garden, and local village of Lydbury."You don't have to travel to nature reserves or mountains," he said.
"I sometimes get snobbery from the big photographers who go to Africa and do the lions and tigers, or Greenland for the Polar bears," he explained."And they think I'm somehow inferior because I do blue tits in the garden."
But, he added, capturing rare images such as a hare feeding her leveret on someone's back lawn was "just amazing".
"At the time I took it, that had been photographed maybe less than 10 times in the world," he said.For months after they landed in Australia, the female players kept their whereabouts a secret while they were living in temporary accommodation as they still feared for their safety.
The local cricket clubs they joined also helped protect their identities.They waited until December 2022 and then wrote to the ICC to tell them they were living in Australia and to ask two big questions: what had happened to their contracts with the ACB and what had happened to the money that goes to the ACB that should be for their development?
They also requested that some of those funds be redirected to the players in Australia.After a month, the ICC replied to say that contracts were a matter for the ACB and that it was up to the board to decide how to spend the funds it receives from the global governing body.