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Muntjac and water deer were introduced to Britain from East Asia.
This book provides a comprehensive overview of their natural
history and the management of their environmental impacts. In
lowland England, muntjac deer are one of the drivers of changes in
woodland structure and species composition, and many of the
principles relating to such woodland impact are also applicable to
the activities of other species of deer. Interest in environmental
impacts of deer is not solely restricted to woodlands. The highest
densities of water deer occur in wetlands, where there is potential
for conflict, and considerable numbers are also found on
agricultural land. Muntjac have also settled in suburbia and
frequently cause impacts there. Conservationists and national
decision makers are concerned both about invasive alien species and
about increasing deer populations. The first section covers the
natural history of both species including: breeding biology, deer
in the field, colonisation of Britain, a detailed look at
colonisation in a single county, methods for studying deer
populations and a review of deer population numbers. The second
section covers environmental impact: risk assessment, impact
management, control of muntjac, effect of muntjac browsing and
grazing, habitat recovery from muntjac impacts and a study on the
impacts of water deer. The section concludes with an overview of
management and monitoring. The costs and benefits of both species
are discussed, and questions asked about whether we are getting on
top of problems caused by muntjac (locally and nationally) and will
water deer turn out to be similar to muntjac? Attitudes and
approaches to these species are changing: with water deer we are
actively studying whether it might be an environmental problem, not
waiting until after it has obviously become one. What will happen
to distribution, numbers, impacts and attitudes in the future? Will
water deer ever become a suburban animal? What does the future hold
for water deer in China and Korea - and how important is the
English population as a global conservation resource?
for solo flute
An intermediate concert piece.
This book describes the history of amphibian conservation and
research in Britain. It is packed with unique insights from the
author who, in the late 1960s, was probably Britain’s first
professional amphibian conservationist. At that time, the situation
for amphibians was extremely serious after three decades of
population decline. Up to the 1990s, Arnold Cooke was directly
involved in understanding and trying to remedy the situation via
research, legislation and active conservation. He initiated
long-term monitoring, surveillance and studies that continued well
into this century. This research developed and utilised simple
monitoring techniques, such as counting breeding newts at night or
toads dead on roads. The resulting datasets also proved of value in
determining whether breeding behaviour was affected by climate
change. This personal overview charts in detail how amphibian
conservation developed from a relatively low knowledge base with
few individuals involved to an abundance of information available
for the many groups of people now active in the field. It includes
published, unpublished and no longer readily accessible material,
to emphasise how contemporary knowledge, attitudes and resources
affected what was done and what happened as a result. Various
policies, strategies, laws and other initiatives have helped stop
or slow declines, but the future is still uncertain. The book will
appeal to a broad readership, from naturalists to professional
herpetologists. Furthermore, this story will have relevance for
amphibian conservation in other countries in light of their more
recent widespread declines. It is also of interest to those wanting
to know more about the development of wildlife conservation in
Britain.
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