back issues
Back issues are listed below. Click on the cover or link to see more detailed information on the contents of each issue. You can use the find box below to search for articles, or search the Cumulative Subject Index for Vol 1 No 1 - Vol 23 No 1 by clicking here. Some back issues have sold out, especially the earlier ones, but we will be making some of the key articles available as pdfs. The first of these can be found under Archives, Classic Articles. The following back issues are available at £4 each.

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Cover image 14 4 Vol 14 No. 4  April 2003
The science that redefines the seasons. Recent results from the UK Phenology Network; The Savernake Tunnel - and important hibernation site for bats; Mammals in Britain - a historical perspective; A naturalist abroad - The Brenne, France; Water frogs in Britain; The status and ecology of the Yellow Wagtail in Britain
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Cover image 14 3 Vol 14 No. 3  
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Cover image 14 2 Vol 14 No. 2  December 2002
Comment: Introductions - are we conserving species at the expense of nature?; Donating land for wildlife. But who wants it?; Putting Dormice back on the map; Killer Whales in British waters; Lapwings in Britain - a new approach to their conservation; Fungi upon other fungi grow - Britain's parasitic toadstools; Havergate Island NNR, Suffolk
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Cover image 14 1 Vol 14 No. 1  October 2002
Bats in Greater London - unique evidence of a decline over 15 years; The UK network of Special Protection Areas for birds; Atlantic hazelwoods - some observations on the ecology of this neglected habitat from a lichenological perspective; Identification: British oil beetles; The New Atlas of the British and Irish Flora; An introduction to British hoverflies and the Hoverfly Recording Scheme
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Cover image 13 6 Vol 13 No. 6  August 2002
Lamprey: relicts from the past; Identification: British elms; Importance of habitat quality and isolation. Implications for the management of butterflies in fragmented landscape; Conserving the Marsh Fritillary in Britain; Lesser Horseshoe Bats in a Welsh valley; The perfect disciple - the perfect hunter. The myths and realities of Mustela
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Cover image 13 5 Vol 13 No. 5  June 2002
Flying earlier in the year - The phenological responses of butterflies and moths to climate change; Are Glow-worms disappearing?; The deadly world of Britain's carnivorous plants; Salisbury Plain Training Area - the British steppes?; Bird communities on chalk grassland - a case study of Salisbury Plain Training Area; Askham Bog, North Yorkshire
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61 - 66 of 82 Back Issues.   [ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 ]
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