An Environmental History of Wildlife in England 1650-1950

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and Introduced Plants and Animals: human perceptions, attitudes and
approaches to management (London: Earthscan, 2011), pp. 55–66.
28 D. W. Yalden, The History of British Mammals (London: Poyser, 1999), p. 204.
29 Corbet and Yalden give figures of 41 indigenous and 19 introduced: G. B.
Corbet and D. W. Yalden, ‘Mammals’, in D. Hawksworth (ed.), The Changing
Wildlife of Great Britain and Ireland (London: Taylor and Francis, 2001),
pp. 399–409. Amongst our freshwater fish there are now 13 established aliens,
compared with 42 indigenous species.
30 Rotherham and R. A. Lambert, ‘Good science, good history’.
31 I. D. Rotherham and R. A. Lambert, ‘Balancing species history, human culture
and scientific insight: introduction and overview’, in I. D. Rotherham and
R. A. Lambert (eds), Invasive and Introduced Plants and Animals: human
perceptions, attitudes and approaches to management (London: Earthscan,
2011), pp. 3–18.
32 Rich, ‘Flowering plants’, p. 28.
33 M. Hill, R. Baker, G. Broad, P. J. Chandler, G. H. Copp, A. Ellis, D. Jones,
C. Hoyland, I. Laing, M. Longshaw, N. Moore, D. Parrot, D. Pearamain,
C. Preston, R. Smith and R. Waters, Audit of Non-Native Species in England
(English Nature Report 662, Peterborough, 2005).
34 K. Alexander, J. Butler and T. Green, ‘The value of different tree and shrub
species to wildlife’, British Wildlife 17 (2006), 19–28.
35 D. Pearamain and K. Walker, ‘Alien plants in Britain: a real or imagined problem?’,
British Wildlife 21 (2009), 22–7. S. Thomas and T. Dines, ‘Non-native invasive
plants in Britain: a real, not imagined, problem’, British Wildlife 21 (2010),
177–83.
36 Bibby, ‘Land use change in Britain’.
37 R. Macfarlane, The Wild Places (London: Granta, 2008).
38 As proposed by Vera himself: F. Vera, ‘Large scale nature development: the
Oostvaardersplassen’, British Wildlife 20 (2009), 28–36.
39 G. F. Peterken, Natural Woodland: ecology and conservation in northern
temperate regions (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), p. 13.
40 A. Byfield, ‘Heathland, plantations and the Forestry Commission: a botanical
perspective’, British Wildlfe 20 (2009), 267–72. Ansden, M. Allison, P. Bradley,
M. Coates, M. Kemp and N. Phillips, ‘Increasing the resilience of our lowland
heaths and acid grassland’, British Wildlife 22 (2010), 101–9. D. Driver, When
to Convert Woods and Forests to Open Habitat in England (Edinburgh:
Forestry Commission, 2010).

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