We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Habitat Management for Invertebrates
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
01 May 2013

A practical guide to the management of habitat for invertebrates.
Many invertebrates are highly specialised creatures with very precise habitat requirements. This means that they can be very sensitive indicators of environmental change. It also means that they can be lost from a site through small changes in management of their habitat. This book is a practical manual covering management for invertebrates: it provides guidelines to enable reserve managers and conservationists to take account of the vulnerable habitat features so important to invertebrates.
The introduction gives an overview of British invertebrate species, site size and vegetation structure, management need of invertebrates and a summary of invertebrate survey methods. The author then deals, chapter-by-chapter, with each major habitat type: woodland, grasslands, lowland heaths, freshwater wetlands, and coastlands.
This is a digital reprint of the 2001 edition (ISBN:0-901930-30-0) - there are no changes or updates from the 2001 edition.
NATURE / Environmental Conservation & Protection, Conservation of wildlife and habitats, SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Zoology / Invertebrates, Ecological science, the Biosphere, Zoology: invertebrates
a welcome addition to the literature on habitat management and invertebrate conservation
— C. Philip Wheater
Peter Kirby is a freelance ecological consultant specialising in invertebrate conservation. Previously, he worked for the Nature Conservation Council for five years, preparing county reviews of sites of invertebrate interest and national reviews of the rarer Hemiptera and minor insect orders. He has published many papers, particularly on the Hemiptera.