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We
are the largest charity working for the conservation of wildlife
and wild spaces within the three counties. Based in five offices,
the Trust campaigns for the sensitive and sustainable management
of wildlife in the countryside and the urban landscape, manages
thousands of hectares of land for wildlife and people, and
carries out extensive educational work
http://www.wildlifetrust.org.uk/bcnp/home.htm
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The
Wildlife Trust for Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire
and Peterborough works for a better future for wildlife across
our area. We manage almost 130 nature reserves covering over
4,500 acres; work to protect rare species (such as the otter,
dormouse and barn owl); and fight to save sites where wildlife
and countryside is threatened.
We involve people in every aspect of our work, through educating
children about their natural environment, and encouraging
everyone to enjoy wildlife and wild places in towns and the
countryside.
The Wildlife Trust is dependent on voluntary donations.
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Objectives:
- Acquisition
and management of sites of nature conservation value
- Sustainable
management of the wider countryside
- Creation
of large scale habitats for the conservation of wildlife
- Access
for people to wildlife
- Access
for people to information about wildlife
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Book Selection
All book purchases from this web page benefit the Wildlife
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Flora of Northamptonshire and the Soke of Peterborough
Gill Gent, Rob Wilson et al
A description of the flowering plants of this English county, the
first to be published since the 1930s. As well as the systematic
flora, the book contains background information on the county's
climate, geology, soils, landscapes and plant habitats. There are
also details of species presumed extinct, rare species and extremely
rare species.
335 pages, col plates, distribution maps.
Northants FG
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Bedfordshire Wildlife
BS Nau
192 pages, line illus, diagrams, maps, col & b/w photos.
Castlemead
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Birds of Huntingdon and Peterborough
John S Clark
The first complete account of the avifauna of the Peterborough area,
with details for all 304 species recorded there.
191 pages, 60 b/w illus, maps.
John S Clark
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Wild Flower Key
Francis Rose
A 1991 reprint with minor corrections of this excellent book. Full
keys to nearly 1400 species of flowers and plants not in flower,
including grasses, sedges and rushes, comprehensively illustrated
with over 1,000 paintings, plus full illustrated glossary of
botanical terms. Covers Britain, lowland areas of France, Belgium,
the Netherlands, northwest Germany and Denmark.
480 pages, col plates, line illus.
Warne Books
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Millennium Atlas of Butterflies in Britain and Ireland
Jim Asher, Martin Warren and Richard Fox
Presents the findings of Butterflies for the New Millennium, the
most comprehensive survey of butterflies ever undertaken in Britain
and Ireland. After five years of recording by thousands of
volunteers, it provides up-to-date assessment of the butterflies,
the habitats they live in, the threats they face, and the major
changes that have occurred since publication of the previous such
atlas in 1984. The body of the book is taken up with species
accounts, each accompanied by a full-page distribution map and a
colour photograph of the butterfly concerned. The book summarises
the wealth of new information about butterfly ecology, incorporating
findings from the Butterfly Monitoring Scheme, describes and
illustrates the habitats favoured by particular communities of
butterflies, and presents a vision of how these insects might be
conserved in the future.
433 pages, col photos, figs, maps.
OUP
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Field Guide to the Insects of Britain and Northern Europe
Michael Chinery
Fully revised edition of Chinery's classic work. Not to be confused
with Chinery's Collins Guide to the Insects of Britain and
Western Europe, this book is a discursive introduction to
entomology, useful for identification, but with an equivalent
content on biology and taxonomics, whereas the Collins Guide is a
straight identification guide.
448 pages, 778 col illus, 1000 b/w illus.
Harper Collins
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Managing Habitats for Conservation
Edited by WJ Sutherland and DA Hill
This comprehensive volume provides a pragmatic, habitat by habitat
guide to conservation management, in which the prescriptions and
methods are based upon sound science coupled with practical
experience. The book indicates basic principles, shows the problems
to look out for and gives examples of how not to manage land for
conservation.
399 pages, col & b/w photos, illus.
CUP
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Collins Wildlife Trust Guide: Trees of Britain and Europe
Keith Rushforth
Comprehensive collection of photographs of everything you need to
identify a tree - whether in winter, spring, summer or autumn. It
covers 800 species of tree - which is every European native, plus of
all the species that are commonly planted in parks and gardens.
1336 pages, 2500 col plates.
Harper Collins
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Field Guide to the Mammals of Britain and Europe
David MacDonald
Definitive field guide to the mammal fauna of Europe written by one
of the world's mammal experts. It covers every species of mammal
that occurs in Europe, including marine mammals, a total of over 230
species. The text covers identification, taxonomy, biology,
behaviour, and distribution. The plates detail not only
identification features but also paw prints, feeding signs and
variants. The most authoritative guide yet published on the European
mammal fauna. The colour plates include over 600 individual
illustrations.
448 pages, 64 colour plates [by Priscilla Barrett], 236 b/w illus, 234 maps.
Harper Collins
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Fenland: Its Ancient Past and Uncertain Future
H Godwin
203 pages, illus.
CUP
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