Ripples on the River: Celebrating the Return of the Otter
By (Author) Laurie Campbell
By (author) Anna Levin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Wildlife
2nd November 2021
19th August 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Wildlife: mammals: general interest
Photography: subject-specific techniques and principles
Conservation of wildlife and habitats
779.329769092
Hardback
176
Width 218mm, Height 258mm, Spine 14mm
889g
A photographic celebration of the return of otters to our rivers and freshwater wetlands after a drastic decline. Ripples of excitement are spreading through Europes rivers and wetlands. A generation ago, otter watching was a wildlife highlight restricted to remote coastal areas otter populations had been decimated over the previous century by pesticide poisoning and habitat disturbance. Now we are seeing the positive effect of determined conservation efforts over recent decades. As our waterways improve, otters are returning and spreading throughout their former habitats. One of the UKs leading natural history photographers, Laurie Campbell got to know otters while working in Scotlands Highlands and Islands, but he had never seen these elusive predators on his home beat. Then, in the early 1990s, he was delighted to find otters back on the Tweed and its tributaries, a river system he has lived close to for most of his life. The discovery launched him on a quest to create a photographic account of their lives on his home river. More than two decades later, otter numbers continue to increase, and new generations of otters have become more confident around people, sometimes appearing in broad daylight and in town centres. Laurie continues his long-standing study, still photographing the otters through the changing seasons always with an eye on the bigger picture of the river itself and the plants and animals that share the otters habitat. Wildlife journalist and writer Anna Levin accompanies Laurie to the riverbank and learns of his working philosophy and fieldcraft. Together they weave a wealth of information into the stories that the pictures tell. While extracts from Annas notebooks offer a vivid glimpse of the photographer at work and the otters that enchant them both.
A beautiful book. * The Herald *
A joy of a book. * The i *
This smartly edited hardback portrays one mans desire to chart the revival of the otters fortunes, which begins on his home river, but evolves into a long-term study of this enchanting mammal. * Country Life *
The images are outstanding and not only of otters, as the keen naturalist captures myriad flora and fauna when on forays. * Country Life *
Anna Levinstitches together the threads of the tale in a readable, lyrical, but not slushy way. * Country Life *
[Campbell and Levin] weave a wealth of information into the stories that the pictures tell and the result is 175 pages of pure delight. * Book of the Month, Countryside *
LAURIE CAMPBELL has dedicated 50 years to photographing natural history and was honoured with the RSPBs Lifetime Achievement Award in 2014 for the contribution his photography has made to nature conservation in Scotland. A multiple-prize winner in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition, his photographs feature in a wide range of publications worldwide. He is the author of the book The RSPB Guide to Bird and Nature Photography and has been commissioned to illustrate many others, including Highlands Scotlands Wild Heart, Golden Eagles and Badgers. ANNA LEVIN is an author, editor and journalist specialising in natural history and the places where words and pictures meet. A former editor with BBC Wildlife Magazine, she has been freelance for 20 years, working for a diverse range of publications and writing features and guidebooks for environmental organisations. Anna is currently a caption writer for the Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition. Her most recent book, Incandescent: We Need to Talk About Light, addresses the impact of artificial light on human health and the natural world.