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Reviews/Back Issues
BACK ISSUES STILL AVAILABLE
Individual back issues £4.00 each.
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Vol 11 No 1: October 1999 - SOLD OUT
Vol 11 No 2: December 1999 - SOLD OUT
Vol 11 No 3: February 2000 - SOLD OUT
Vol 11 No 4: April 2000 - SOLD OUT
Vol 11 No 5: June 2000 - SOLD OUT
Vol 11 No 6: August 2000 - SOLD OUT
Vol 12 No 1: October 2000 - SOLD OUT
Vol 12 No 2: December 2000 - SOLD OUT
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 Vol 7 No 6 August 1996
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 Vol 8 No 6 August 1997
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Vol 12 No 3: February 2001 - SOLD OUT
Vol 12 No 4: April 2001 - SOLD OUT
Vol 12 No 5: June 2001 - SOLD OUT
Vol 12 No 6: August 2001 - SOLD OUT
Vol 13 No 1: October 2001 Comment: British wildlife and human numbers: the ultimate conservation issue?; Can fish determine the conservation value of shallow lakes in the UK?; Comment: Future directions in agriculture policy and nature conservation; The Coppice Butterflies Challenge: a targeted grant scheme for threatened species; Classic wildlife sites: Malham Tarn NNR; Identification: Wild Boar signs in southern England; The first field guides: the Wayside and Woodland books
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Vol 13 No 2: December 2001 - SOLD OUT
Vol 13 No 3: February 2002 Behavioural ecology of farmers: what does it mean for wildlife?; The fall and rise of Ainsdale's Natterjacks; Nesting behaviour of the Red Kite in the Chilterns; Conserving our little Galapagos - Lundy, Lundy Cabbage and its beetles; Recording Britain's spiders; Rhos Llawr Cwt NNR, Ceredigion
Vol 13 No 4: April 2002 The status, conservation and use of the Medicinal Leech; The affair of the 'Long-willied' (Real's) Wood White; Small cetaceans of Cardigan Bay; Water Voles in the Highlands; History, ecology and conservation of the New Forest Cicada; The Ouse Washes, Cambridgeshire
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
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
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
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
Vol 14 No 3: February 2003 - SOLD OUT
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
Vol 14 No 5: June 2003 - SOLD OUT
Vol 14 No 6: August 2003 Woodlice, chiselbobs and sow-bugs; Wild mushrooms in Britain; The Welsh uplands - past, present and future; Putting our alien flora into perspective; The fan shell Atrina fragilis - a species of conservation concern
Vol 15 No 1: October 2003 The Greater Horseshoe Bat Project: a species conservation success story; Turning the tide for saltmarshes; Conserving Scotland’s Slavonian Grebes; Putting Purbeck’s BAP into action - a case study; Creating wild-flower meadows by strewing green hay; The discovery of Large Cone-head Bush-cricket in the Isles of Scilly; Grey Mare’s Tail Reserve, South Scotland
Vol 15 No 2: December 2003 Sunbleak and Topmouth Gudgeon – two new additions to Britain’s freshwater fishes; Zapovedniks – scientific nature reserves in Russia; Identification – Bladder-ferns Cystopteris of the British Isles; Comment: Britain’s contribution to global conservation and our coastal temperate rainforest; Gilfach – an upland farm and nature reserve; Mountain Hares in the Peak District
Vol 15 No 3: February 2004 - SOLD OUT
Vol 15 No 4: April 2004 The ecology of the Pearl-bordered Fritillary in woodland; Reserve Focus: Thompson Common NR, Norfolk; Nature’s changing seasons – 2003 results from the UK Phenology Network; The burning of uplands and its effect on wildlife; Links with West Africa: people, policy and migratory birds; Cypress trees and their moths
Vol 15 No 5: June 2004 Where have all the bumblebees gone, and could they ever return?; What the UK BAP has done for the River Jelly Lichen; Beyond hypothesis – a long-term study of British snakes; The Status, ecology and conservation of the Smelt in the British Isles; Classic wildlife sites – St Kilda
Vol 15 No 6: August 2004 Classic wildlife site: The natural history and conservation of Porton Down; Grazing domestic animals on British saltmarshes; The English names of butterflies; Comment: Should conservationists continue to ignore plant hybrids?; The three smallest British diving beetles
Vol 16 No 1: October 2004 Gardens and wildlife – the BUGS project; Silent invasions – the natural history of chalk pits; Charismatic megafungi – the conservation of waxcap grasslands; Merthyr Mawr National Nature Reserve
Vol 16 No 2: December 2004 Millipedes; Insects and fleshy fruits; The Downy Emerald – an enigmatic dragonfly? Classic wildlife sites – Mar Lodge Estate, Cairngorms; Comment - Spread of the Noosphere.
Vol 16 No 3: February 2005 Extreme butterfly-collecting – a biography of I R P Heslop; The habitat survey of Wales; Identification – British land flatworms; The nature-conservation value of abandoned metalliferous mine sites in Cornwall; Comment - Is there a case for the Celtic Maple or the Scots Plane?
Vol 16 No 4: April 2005 Identification - Clearwing moths; Farming for Nature; Nature’s Calendar – 2004 results from the UK Phenology Network; Environmental Stewardship; Great Silver Water Beetle in Britain – a cry for help; Letter from the far West Coast; Miriam Rothschild 1908 – 2005
Vol 16 No 5: June 2005 The Badgeworth Buttercup – the smallest reserve gets bigger; Gorse Mites and their predators; Montane scrub – the challenge of the ‘wee trees’; Mowing grasslands in churchyards: getting conservation advice right; Allaying public fears of health issues on wetlands; Predation and the profitability of grouse moors
Vol 16 No 6: August 2005 Comment - A trial reintroduction of the European Beaver; British Moths: throwing light on a new conservation challenge; The ecology and management of drawdown zones; Ecology of the Harlequin Ladybird - a new invasive species; Derek A Ratcliffe 1929-2005; Knottholes: the wildlife of Peterborough's claypits
Vol 17 No 1: October 2005 Britain's wildlife on the internet - The NBN Gateway; natural woodland reserves - 60 years of trying at Lady Park Wood reserve; In search of the Land Caddis; Richard Fitter 1913-2005; Comment - Caged flowers
Vol 17 No 2: December 2005 - SOLD OUT
Vol 17 No 3: February 2006 Status of the Common Tree Frog in Britain; Thirty years and counting – the contribution to conservation and ecology of butterfly monitoring in the UK; The Wiltshire Fritillary meadows: a case study in habitat degradation; Restoration of transition mires in the New Forest; Woolmer Forest – 30 years of conservation work
Vol 17 No 4: April 2006 – 100th issue Seventeen eventful years – a review; Hedgerows and the historic landscape – a case study from south Gower; The UK Phenology Network: some highlights from 2005; Reserves Focus: Ramsey Island, Pembrokeshire; Identification: Britain’s biggest hoverflies – the genus Volucella
Vol 17 No 5: June 2006 Centipedes; Flowers in the fields: community conservation in the Lower Wye Valley; A flower in the desert: wildlife of the Wimpole Estate, Cambridgeshire; The rocks remain: a retrospective on Roineabhal; Are British bats at risk from windfarms?
Vol 17 No 6: August 2006 - SOLD OUT
Vol 18 No 1: October 2006 Monitoring the condition of UK protected sites: results from the first six years; Comment: Goodbye English Nature, hello Natural England; The value of different tree and shrub species to wildlife; Life in marine meadows: the communities of eelgrass beds; Tycanol – a fortress for nature
Vol 18 No 2: December 2006 The Bullhead - its biology and conservation; The 'global fungal weeds': the toadstools of wood-chip beds; The Twenty Acres: a Scottish flood meadow with a history; The New Forest - National Park status for a medieval survivor
Vol 18 No 3: February 2007 British wildlife and climate change 1. Evidence of change; British wild plants for wildlife schemes; Improving the contribution of urban gardens for wildlife: some guiding propositions; Invertebrates associated with coarse woody debris in streams and rivers in Britain; Classic wildlife sites: The Torbay limestones
Vol 18 No 4: April 2007 The BTO's Nest Record Scheme - the value of counting your eggs before they hatch; The UK Phenology Network - enlisting the nature detectives of the future; The Eye Brook - a multifunctional approach to catchment management; Comment: Planting trees or woodlands? An ecologist's perspective; Are the Fens a national stronghold for Water Voles? Evidence from the Cambridgeshire fens; Spring fungi are fruiting earlier
Vol 18 No 5: June 2007 Nature After Minerals: a major role for quarries in nature conservation; Lowland Grass Survey of Wales; Long-term experimental studies of lowland grasslands and heaths in the UK; Life after low flow – ecological recovery of the River Misbourne
Vol 18 No 6: August 2007 British wildlife and climate change 2. Adapting to climate change; Bird Atlas 2007-11 – an overview of atlases and plans for 2007-11; Heathland and wood pasture in Norfolk: ecology and landscape history; Identification: Longhorn beetles: Part 1; The Great Fen – a waterland for the future
Vol 19 No 1: October 2007 Bird conservation and access: coexistence or compromise? The Birkdale Green Beach - a sand-dune biodiversity hotspot; Dinas Island Farm, Pembrokeshire – A Golden Future? Letting our carbon go free. The sustainable management of carbon and blanket peat in the English uplands; Identification: Longhorn beetles: Part 2
Vol 19 No 2: December 2007 Are gardens good for birds or birdwatchers?; Dragonflies as climate-change indicators; Solitary-sociable dolphins in the UK; Food, fibre, fuel and fauna – can we have it all?; Turloughs – Ireland’s vanishing lakes
Vol 19 No 3: February 2008 Darwin’s war-horse: beetle-collecting in 19th-century England; Conservation of bats in British woodlands; Life on the edge – key coastal soft cliffs for invertebrates in England and Wales; The Harlequin Ladybird marches on; Keskadale – an oakwood on the edge; The ladybird, the scale and the spindle – a highly specialised relationship
Vol 19 No 4: April 2008 The Flow Country revisited; Man at the crossroads: butterflies, moths and climate warming on the Isle of Man; Pollards and pollarding in Europe; The UK Phenology Network hits double figures; Identification: Broomrapes of the British Isles.
Vol 19 No 5: June 2008 An undercurrent of change for Norfolk’s seals; BTO is 75 years old – what have its archives got to offer?; The Myth of the Master Tree – Mate-location strategies of the Purple Emperor butterfly; British mosquitoes; It’s a small world.
Vol 19 No 6: August 2008 - SOLD OUT
Vol 20 No 1: October 2008 - SOLD OUT
Vol 20 No 2: December 2008 The History of the Eurasian Lynx in Britain and the potential for its reintroduction; Moths Count: the National Moth Recording Scheme; British wildlife and climate change 3. The future; Classic Wildlife Sites: South Gower Coast
Vol 20 No 3: February 2009 The Ladybird Spider in Britain - its history, ecology and conservation; Woodland origins of meadows; The changing status of amphibians within Epping Forest; Hengistbury Head and Christchurch Harbour - long-term studies and the local community; Identification: Orthotrichum - Britain’s bristle-mosses
Vol 20 No 4: April 2009 Sentinels of climate change - species of the rocky intertidal zone; The Polecat in Britain - continuing recovery; The blurring of the seasons: a focus on autumn phenology; Waterbirds, climate change and wildlife conservation in Britain; British ticks; Comment: Heathland, plantation and the Forestry Commission - a botanical perspective
Vol 20 No 5: June 2009 Boom or bust - a sustainable future for reedbeds and Bitterns?; Observations of Purple Hairstreaks at canopy level; Hedgerows - their wildlife, current state and management needs; Identifying voles from their field signs; Intertidal Phase 1 Mapping Survey of Wales.
Vol 20 No 6: August 2009 The folk-names of invertebrates; Climate change and the high Cairngorms: reality and hyperbole; Brown Galingale at Breamore Marsh; Eagle Owls in Britain: origins and conservation implications; Lundy - Britain’s ‘Kingdom of Heaven’.
Vol 21 No 1: October 2009 - SOLD OUT The Burren - farming for the future of the fertile rock; The water and wildlife of the Hampshire Avon winterbournes; Comment: Alien plants in Britain - a real or imagined problem? Predation of breeding waders on lowland wet grassland - is it a problem? The lesser Glow-worm in Britain: native or newcomer?
Vol 21 No 2: December 2009 The National Dormouse Monitoring Programme - 21 years of bags and boxes; Rural gardens, allotments and biodiversity; Dordogne - an exotic England? An introduction to the wildlife and nature conservation of a rural French departement; The role of DNA-fingerprinting in the conservation of the native Black Poplar; The return of the native: loss and repatriation of the Short-haired Bumblebee Bombus subterraneus.
Vol 21 No 3: February 2010 Black Guillemots at Bangor, Co Down: a 25-year study; The flowering of Cross Fell: montane vegetation and foot-and-mouth; Sea-level rise: implications for people and wildlife; Non-native invasive plants in Britain – a real, not imagined, problem; The state of upland hay meadows in the North Pennines
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Binder and index: available at £7.95 each (please note that the indexes for Vols 1, 2, 3, 4, 9 and 10 are no longer available, and the binder only will be supplied for these volumes). Index: Vols 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20 are available at £2.50 each
Order online from our e-shop, or if you prefer send your order with a cheque payable to British Wildlife Publishing (overseas cheques must be in Pounds Sterling, drawn on a UK bank) or supply credit card details to: Subs Department, British Wildlife Publishing, The Old Dairy, Milton on Stour, Gillingham, Dorset SP8 5PX.
Telephone orders can be placed on 01747 835511
February 2010
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© British Wildlife Publishing
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