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Birds and Forestry


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Birds and Forestry

Contributors:

By (Author) Mark Avery
Cover design or artwork by Philip Snow
By (author) Roderick Leslie
Illustrated by Philip Snow
Foreword by David Bellamy

ISBN:

9781408137680

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

T & AD Poyser

Publication Date:

1st January 2011

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Zoology: birds (ornithology)
Forestry and silviculture
Conservation of wildlife and habitats
Forestry industry

Dewey:

598

Physical Properties

Number of Pages:

312

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 19mm

Weight:

712g

Description

In this book, an ornithologist and a forester have combined their skills to try and tease out the real facts behind the various arguments on forestry.

The conflict between forestry and nature conservation has become a major environmental issue in Britain in the 1980s. The planting of large tracts of land with exotic conifers and the resulting disturbance of existing plant and animal communities has polarized the debate, each camp believing that it has the most rational view.

But the interactions involved are complex. Which bird species are really threatened How can we judge the relative value of bird species ousted by plantations and the new species which colonize them How can the need for forest products be reconciled with the demands of conservationists

This fascinating book tackles these issues in a forthright manner. It represents a significant step towards achieving the sort of prudent land planning that will really improve our beleaguered countryside.

Jacket painting by Philip Snow. Foreword by David Bellamy.

Author Bio

Mark Avery has combined bird watching with a career as a biologist. Since graduating from Cambridge University he has studied at Oxford and Aberdeen Universities and worked on Great Tit song, food-hoarding by Marsh Tits, foraging and social behaviour of Bee-eaters and hibernation of pipistrelle bats. Mark joined the RSPB staff in 1986 to work in the Flow Country and is now a Senior Research Biologist for the Society working on scientific aspects of land-use, international and marine issues.

Roderick Leslie was educated at Rugby and Oxford, where he took a degree in Agriculture and Forest Sciences. Interested in waders, cannon-netting on the Wash and ringing, he joined the Forestry Commission in 1976 and became involved in studies of the birds of second rotation forest, including Nightjar. He has worked in Northumberland, North Yorkshire where he was BTO regional representative, and Thetford. In 1988, following a three-year term as the Forestry Commissions Wildlife and Conservation officer at F.C. Headquarters in Edinburgh, he became the Private Forestry & Environment Officer for the Commissions West of England Conservancy based in Bristol. He was a member of the RSPB Council from 19841989.

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