Keith Kirby was for over 30 years a woodland ecologist with Natural England and its predecessors and has a wealth of experience from different surveys across Britain. Jeanette Hall now has a similar role in Scottish Natural Heritage and adds an upland perspective to the mix. Both have drawn extensively on the experience of past and present colleagues in the agencies and elsewhere to create this account.
Description
Preface Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Background to nature conservation surveys 3. Landscape-scale assessment - putting sites into their wider context 4. Site assessment surveys 5. A basic walkabout survey 6. Going beyond walkabout 7. Surveys for species groups other than vascular plants 8. Long-term surveillance to detect change 9. Conclusions References Appendices
Reviews
... this book is very practical and ideally suited to citizen science projects, especially given that woodlands are increasingly under threat. -- Roy Stewart * BNA Country-Side Magazine * Kirby and Hall have done a good job, as have the publishers with an attractive, easily used and very well illustrated volume. -- Julian Evans * Quarterly Journal of Forestry * The book is a real boon to all interested in woodland and its ecology, and in addition its analytical detail should be a compulsory 'read' for anyone undertaking any survey work. -- Chris O Badenoch * Scottish Forestry *

