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British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

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Academic & Professional Books  Mammals  Insectivores to Ungulates  Carnivores  Weasels, Badgers, Otters & other Mustelids

The Badgers of Wytham Woods A Model for Behaviour, Ecology, and Evolution

Monograph
By: David W Macdonald(Author), Chris Newman(Author), John Krebs(Foreword By)
569 pages, 272 colour photos and colour & b/w illustrations
NHBS
A comprehensive monograph on this long-term research project that has studied these badgers for almost 50 years, providing deeper insights into mammalian behaviour, ecology, epidemiology, evolutionary biology, and conservation.
The Badgers of Wytham Woods
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  • The Badgers of Wytham Woods ISBN: 9780192845368 Hardback Nov 2022 In stock
    £39.99
    #256905
Price: £39.99
About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

The badgers of Wytham Woods (Oxford, UK) have been studied continuously and intensively by David Macdonald for almost 50 years (25 of them with his former student and co-author Chris Newman), generating a wealth of data pertaining to every facet of their ecology and evolution. Through a mix of accessible, highly readable prose and cutting-edge science, the authors weave a riveting scientific story of the lives of these intriguing creatures, highlighting the insights offered to science more broadly through badgers as a model system. They provide a paradigm – from population down to molecule – for a deeper understanding of mammalian behaviour, ecology, epidemiology, evolutionary biology, and conservation. The real value of this long-term study is particularly apparent with current and globally relevant challenges such as climate change, disease epidemics, and senescence. This unique dataset enables us to examine these issues in a context that only a half-century experiment can reveal.

The Badgers of Wytham Woods will appeal to a broad audience of professional academics (especially carnivore and mammalian biologists), researchers and students at all levels, governmental and non-governmental wildlife bodies, and to the natural historian fascinated by wild animals and the remarkable processes of nature they exemplify.

Contents

Foreword, Lord John Krebs of Wytham
Preface
1. Setting the Scene: Births and Beginnings
2. It's Tough at the Bottom
3. Apprenticeships for Badger Society
4. Setts, Society and Super-groups: The Geology of Social Behaviour
5. The Sum of the Parts: Knowing One's Place in Badger Society
6. Social Odours: The Perfume of Society
7. Sex: How and Why, and with Whom?
8. Social Behaviour in an Uncooperative Society
9. Who Goes There: Friend or Foe?
10. The Ecological Foundations to Badger Group-Living
11. The Economics of Survival: Population Size, and Crashing through the Ceiling
12. Weather: Actuarial Insights
13. Weather: Behaviour at the Worm Front
14. The Game of Life
15. In Sickness and in Health
16. The Story of Badgers and TB: Perturbation and Beyond
17. Genetic Mate Choice: Quality Matters
18. Senescence, Telomeres, and Life-History Trade-Offs
19. Of the Same Stripe, or Not: Exceptions that Prove Rules

Customer Reviews

Biography

Professor David Macdonald CBE has been Director of the Wildlife Conservation Research Unit at Oxford University since founding it in 1986, and is also a Senior Research Fellow in Wildlife Conservation at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. He began research in Wytham Woods in 1972 and has been studying badgers since then. In 1986 he began the routine annual sampling of badgers which is the foundation of this book. A recent survey by BBC Wildlife magazine listed him amongst the ten most influential living conservationists, and he has twice been awarded the Natural History Author of the Year.

Chris Newman joined the Wildlife Conservation Unit at Oxford University in 1991, spending 15 years living on-site in the heart of Wytham Woods which gave him unprecedented access to the 300 badgers that shared his garden. In 2019 he moved to Novia Scotia to work as an independent ecological consultant.

Monograph
By: David W Macdonald(Author), Chris Newman(Author), John Krebs(Foreword By)
569 pages, 272 colour photos and colour & b/w illustrations
NHBS
A comprehensive monograph on this long-term research project that has studied these badgers for almost 50 years, providing deeper insights into mammalian behaviour, ecology, epidemiology, evolutionary biology, and conservation.
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