Birds and Forestry

Poyser Monographs

Boken er skrevet av en skogbruker og en ornitolog, og er et forsøk på å virkelig se hvilke fugler som kan være truet og hvilke som har fordel av det moderne skogbruket.

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Varenummer: 800256 Kategori:
Utgivelsesår:2010-10
Antall sider:312
Fotos - illustrasjoner:s/h bilder, ill. og tabeller.
Innbinding:Innbundet
ISBN:9781408137680
Språk:Engelsk
Serie:Poyser Monographs
Forlag:Poyser
Forfatter:Mark Avery, Roderick Leslie

Digitalt nytrykk av original fra 1990 (print on demand)

Forlagets egne omtale:

In this book an ornithologist and a forester have combined their skills to
try and tease out the real facts behind the various arguments: 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.
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 Commission’s Wildlife and Conservation officer at F.C. Headquarters
in Edinburgh, he became the Private Forestry & Environment Officer for the
Commission’s West of England Conservancy based in Bristol. He was a member of
the RSPB Council from 1984–1989.
Jacket painting by Philip Snow

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