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Trees in England 2017 - Management and disease since 1600 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R573
Discovery Miles 5 730
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Trees in England 2017 - Management and disease since 1600 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R573
Discovery Miles 5 730
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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There is currently much concern about our trees and woodlands. The
terrible toll taken by Dutch elm disease has been followed by a
string of further epidemics, most worryingly ash chalara - and
there are more threats on the horizon. There is also a widely
shared belief that our woods have been steadily disappearing over
recent decades, either replanted with alien conifers or destroyed
entirely in order to make way for farmland or development. But the
present state of our trees needs to be examined critically, and
from an historical as much as from a scientific perspective. For
English tree populations have long been highly unnatural in
character, shaped by economic and social as much as by
environmental factors. In reality, the recent history of trees and
woods in England is more complex and less negative than we often
assume and any narrative of decline and loss is overly simplistic.
The numbers of trees and the extent and character of woodland have
been in a state of flux for centuries. Research leaves no doubt,
moreover, that arboreal ill health is nothing new. Levels of
disease are certainly increasing but this is as much a consequence
of changes in the way we treat trees - especially the decline in
intensive management which has occurred over the last century and a
half - as it is of the arrival of new diseases. And man, not
nature, has shaped the essential character of rural tree
populations, ensuring their dominance by just a few indigenous
species and thus rendering them peculiarly vulnerable to invasive
pests and diseases. The messages from history are clear: we can and
should plant our landscape with a wider palette, providing greater
resilience in the face of future pathogens; and the most
`unnatural' and rigorously managed tree populations are also the
healthiest. The results of an ambitious research project are here
shaped into a richly detailed survey of English arboriculture over
the last four centuries. Trees in England will be essential reading
not only for landscape historians but also for natural scientists,
foresters and all those interested in the future of the
countryside. Only by understanding the essentially human history of
our trees and woods can we hope to protect and enhance them.
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