Wild Singapore
By (Author) Geoffrey Davison
By (author) Benjamin Lee
By (author) Ria Tan
John Beaufoy Publishing Ltd
John Beaufoy Publishing Ltd
10th April 2025
24th April 2025
3rd edition
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
590.95957
Hardback
208
Width 190mm, Height 230mm
Wild Singapore combines vivid photographs of marine and terrestrial sites and species with a highly informative and readable text. The book starts with a look at Singapores wild past: its biogeography from before human occupation up to 19th century changes and finishes with a look at the possible future of wildlife in the country. In between, there are full details on the current flora and fauna to be found in and on Singapores reefs and rocks, mangroves and mud, lowland and swamp forests, and parks and gardens. A unique feature in each chapter is the Nature Snapshot which takes readers to specific habitats to explore the trees, birds, plants and animals to be found there. Written by three expert authors, this fully updated third edition provides an authoritative and entertaining survey of the wide spectrum of wildlife on the land and in the seas of Singapore.
Dr Geoffrey Davison spent all his working life in South-East Asia, as a university lecturer in Malaysia, a conservationist with WWF, and then with the National Parks Board, Singapore. His interests range across ornithology, tropical forest ecology and animal taxonomy. He has written numerous scientific papers as well as books, including the bestselling Naturalists Guide to the Birds of Malaysia.
Ria Tan is passionate about Singapore's marine life as a writer, photographer and observer. She regularly monitors about 40 seashore locations and, working closely with the National Parks Board, she helps manage teams of volunteers.
Benjamin Lee studied zoology at the National University of Singapore. He has worked at the National Parks Board since 2000 and spent eight years managing the rainforest nature reserves as a senior conservation officer. He currently heads special projects in the Conservation Division.