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In the mid 1970s two events led me to get to know the Yorkshire
Dales better than I had previously. Since 1964 I had been to the
Malham Tarn Field Centre with groups of students, first from the
University of Edinburgh and then from the University of York, and
my family very much enjoyed the summer days we spent amid this
magnificent hill scenery. In 1976, the British Ecological Society
and the National Trust jointly worked on a survey of the biological
interest of the National Trust properties of the Kent, East Anglian
and Yorkshire Regions. Malham Tarn itself, and the surrounding
farms, formed one of the twenty properties of the Yorkshire Region.
I spent the bank holiday, that commemorated the Queen's Silver
Jubilee, at Malham, looking fairly closely at the National Trust's
landholding there. Miss Sarah Priest, who also looked at the
National Trust properties, and I produced a report in late 1977,
attempting both to describe and to evaluate the nature resources of
the National Trust in Yorkshire. In the following year, 1978, the
Nature Conservancy Council wanted to survey the whole of the upland
area that was known as the Malhaml Arncliffe SSSI (Site of Special
Scientific Interest). A contract to look at such an exciting area,
considering where boundaries should go, and looking to see if there
were important areas of habitat that should be brought within the
SSSI, was a superb practical antidote to an office in the
University.
Soil has generally been regarded as something of a 'black box' by
ecologists. The importance of soil is obvious: it provides physical
support for plants, and both the living and non-living components
contribute to a variety of important environmental functions. Soil
is a species-rich habitat, but many questions about the ecological
significance of the soil's biological diversity, and in particular
how it affects ecosystem function, have never been asked. The
linkages between above-ground ecology, which is rich in ecological
theory, and below-ground ecology, where investigation has been
restricted by methodological difficulties, have not been made.
Technical developments, including isotopic and molecular methods as
well as experimental and modelling approaches, have led to a
renaissance in soil biodiversity research. The key areas are
reflected in this exciting volume which brings together many
leading contributors to explore the role and importance of soil
biota.
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