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Coming Soon: Why Conservation Isn't Working - Understanding Wildlife in the Modern World

Posted by David Penney on

We are very pleased to announce the following title is currently in production and nearing completion, for an expected publication date of June/July 2021: Why Conservation Isn't Working - Understanding Wildlife in the Modern World by Adrian Spalding, with a foreword by Kurt Jackson. ISBN 978-1-8381528-4-0, 160 pp, 240 x 165 mm, soft cover.



Reviews
in preparation

From the back cover
(the next year) “… must be the year to reconcile humanity with nature” – António Guterres, United Nations Secretary General.

This book attempts to put species into the context of our perception. Animals are more than their physical form. They exist within their historical setting, within their habitats, within their past and their evolutionary future, both outside and beyond man, and within man and his circle. This work discusses the movement of species since the last ice age, what is native and non-native, migration, adaptation, the role of man and species in the industrial landscape. The concept of species lies at the heart of nature conservation, but our perception is changing and losing connection with the real world. We see wildlife as adjuncts to people, such as a cure for depression and isolation. With this view, we will never save wildlife from extinction.

This book investigates the authenticity of species, compared with what are termed McDonald’s species – species without natural connection with their habitats, super-imposed by Man, eroding the umbilical cord link with history. We have lost sight of what wildlife is about and instead are just managing decline. Concentration on large iconic species achieves brilliant publicity but looks after the icing whilst the cake crumbles beneath.

This volume highlights the need for authenticity in wildlife. We need to accept where wildlife goes, minimising our interference, re-directing money towards where wildlife wants to be – in new as well as old habitats, by natural colonisation, in post-industrial landscapes, brown-field sites, railway corridors, metal-contaminated landscapes. It takes rewilding and makes it species led – where ugly animals thrive to the same extent as beautiful ones, where the minute are as important as the huge.

About the author
Adrian Spalding has run an environmental consultancy for over 20 years and has worked with wildlife charities, statutory authorities, council planners, developers, highways agencies, railway companies and renewable energy companies throughout the UK. He has travelled widely in six of the seven continents. He is an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Exeter, a member of the Conservation Committee of the Royal Entomological Society, editor of the Entomologist’s Gazette, former President of the British Entomological and Natural History Society, former Academic Director, Cornish Biological Records Unit (University of Exeter) and past member of the Council of Butterfly Conservation. A qualified teacher, he also has degrees in history and zoology. He used to host a weekly wildlife programme on Radio Cornwall. He has written several books on wildlife and won the Holyer an Gof prize for his book Loe Bar and the Sandhill Rustic Moth. His interest in butterflies and moths dates back to when he was eight-years-old, watching an Indian Moon Moth emerge from its cocoon and expand its long tails on the living room window sill; the moth Spalding’s Dart is named after him.

Contents

Acknowledgements

INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER 1: THE EXISTENTIAL SPECIES

            Other/alien

            Within our possession/ownership

            An extension of ourselves

            Representing aspects of our psyche and civilization

CHAPTER 2. SPECIES IN HISTORICAL CONTINUUM

CHAPTER 3. NATIVE OR NON-NATIVE

CHAPTER 4. THE ROLE OF MAN

            Exhibit

            Domesticate

            Allow to live with us

            Alter

            Release – into the wild

            Economic reasons

            Ornamental reasons

            Sporting reasons

            Other reasons

            Introduce accidentally

            Eradicate

            Monitor

            Manage

            Rewilding

CHAPTER 5. MIGRANT SPECIES

CHAPTER 6. SPECIES IN THE INDUSTRIAL LANDSCAPE

            Mine sites

            High Speed One (HS1)

            Butterflies and roads

            Light pollution

            The Peppered Moth

CHAPTER 7. THE ARTIFICIALITY OF OUR UNDERSTANDING

REFERENCES

APPENDIX: What are species?

GENERAL INDEX

SPECIES INDEX


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