Woodland Flowers: Colourful past, uncertain future
A scientifically robust but highly readable account of the wood beneath the trees.

More often than not, we don't see the wood for the trees. Observing the plants of the forest floor—the flowers, ferns, sedges and grasses—can be a vital way of understanding the nature of British woodland.

For centuries, woodland plants have been part of our lives in practical ways, as food and medicines, and as the inspirations for poetry, perfume and pub signs. They tell us stories about the history of woodland, its past management, and how that has changed—not always for the better. They can also be a visible sign of progress when we get conservation right.

In this insightful and original account, Keith Kirby explores how woodland plants in Britain have come to be where they are, how they cope with living in the shade of their bigger relatives and tolerate the attentions of grazing herbivores, the challenges they face with changing conditions throughout the seasons, and how they respond to threats in the form of storms, fires, droughts and floods. Along the way, the reader is introduced to the work of important botanists who have walked the woods in the past, collecting information on where plants occur and why, while profiles of some of our most important and popular ground flora species provide extra detail and insight.

1134370060
Woodland Flowers: Colourful past, uncertain future
A scientifically robust but highly readable account of the wood beneath the trees.

More often than not, we don't see the wood for the trees. Observing the plants of the forest floor—the flowers, ferns, sedges and grasses—can be a vital way of understanding the nature of British woodland.

For centuries, woodland plants have been part of our lives in practical ways, as food and medicines, and as the inspirations for poetry, perfume and pub signs. They tell us stories about the history of woodland, its past management, and how that has changed—not always for the better. They can also be a visible sign of progress when we get conservation right.

In this insightful and original account, Keith Kirby explores how woodland plants in Britain have come to be where they are, how they cope with living in the shade of their bigger relatives and tolerate the attentions of grazing herbivores, the challenges they face with changing conditions throughout the seasons, and how they respond to threats in the form of storms, fires, droughts and floods. Along the way, the reader is introduced to the work of important botanists who have walked the woods in the past, collecting information on where plants occur and why, while profiles of some of our most important and popular ground flora species provide extra detail and insight.

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Woodland Flowers: Colourful past, uncertain future

Woodland Flowers: Colourful past, uncertain future

by Keith Kirby
Woodland Flowers: Colourful past, uncertain future

Woodland Flowers: Colourful past, uncertain future

by Keith Kirby

Hardcover

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Overview

A scientifically robust but highly readable account of the wood beneath the trees.

More often than not, we don't see the wood for the trees. Observing the plants of the forest floor—the flowers, ferns, sedges and grasses—can be a vital way of understanding the nature of British woodland.

For centuries, woodland plants have been part of our lives in practical ways, as food and medicines, and as the inspirations for poetry, perfume and pub signs. They tell us stories about the history of woodland, its past management, and how that has changed—not always for the better. They can also be a visible sign of progress when we get conservation right.

In this insightful and original account, Keith Kirby explores how woodland plants in Britain have come to be where they are, how they cope with living in the shade of their bigger relatives and tolerate the attentions of grazing herbivores, the challenges they face with changing conditions throughout the seasons, and how they respond to threats in the form of storms, fires, droughts and floods. Along the way, the reader is introduced to the work of important botanists who have walked the woods in the past, collecting information on where plants occur and why, while profiles of some of our most important and popular ground flora species provide extra detail and insight.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781472949073
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
Publication date: 10/13/2020
Series: British Wildlife Collection
Pages: 400
Product dimensions: 6.81(w) x 9.88(h) x 1.14(d)

About the Author

Keith Kirby is currently a visiting researcher at the Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, where his main areas of work include analysis of long-term woodland changes and rewilding. Before that, he worked as a woodland ecologist with the government conservation agencies for many years, first with the Nature Conservancy Council and then its successor bodies, English Nature and Natural England. Keith was awarded the Royal Forestry Society Gold Medal for Distinguished Services to Forestry in 2011, and the CIEEM Medal for his outstanding, lifelong contribution to the advancement of ecology, forestry and woodland management in 2014. He has written widely for both refereed and more popular journals and the press, as well as co-editing the book Europe's Changing Woods and Forests and co-authoring the Woodland Survey Handbook.

Table of Contents

Preface 7

Map 10

1 Into the woods 13

2 The wandering botanist 35

3 Historical influences and woodland plant distributions 47

4 Commonness and rarity 61

5 The wood below the ground 77

6 Types of British woodland: the north and west 93

7 Types of British woodland: the south and east 111

8 For everything there is a season 131

9 Mind the gap: the woodcutter's legacy 159

10 Unplanned forest disturbances 179

11 The effects of grazing animals 199

12 The nature of the wildwood 225

13 Woodland plants across the channels 243

14 Lines and links in the landscape 257

15 New woods and their flora 271

16 A changing atmosphere 303

17 Fun and games in the woods 317

18 Seven ages of conservation 337

19 Future-natural woodland: holding the line/going with the flow 353

Appendices 368

References 380

Illustration credits 391

Index 392

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