TY - BOOK AU - Peterken,G.F. AU - Mountford,Edward P. ED - C.A.B. International, TI - Woodland development: a long-term study of Lady Park Wood SN - 9781780648668 AV - SD182.L33 P48 2017eb U1 - 577.30942 23 PY - 2017/// CY - Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK PB - CABI KW - Forests and forestry KW - England KW - Wales KW - Forest management KW - cabt KW - Forest plantations KW - Forest trees KW - Forests KW - National parks KW - Natural stands KW - Nature conservation KW - Nature reserves KW - Reserved forests KW - Resource conservation KW - Trees KW - Wilderness KW - Woodlands KW - Lady Park Wood National Nature Reserve (Wales and England) N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Understanding woods -- Lady Park Wood and its history -- The ecological reserve -- Recording trees and expressing change -- The changing wood -- Ash : the tree in the spotlight -- Beech and oak, the major forest trees -- Limes and wych elm -- Birch and other short-lived canopy trees -- Field maple and hazel, the other coppice species -- Minor trees and shrubs -- Habitats -- Species -- Long-term ecological studies -- Natural woodland in theory and practice -- Near-to-nature forestry -- Re-wilding, remoteness and wilderness; Access limited to subscribing institution; Also available in print format N2 - Lady Park Wood was set aside as a 'natural' (i.e. unmanaged) reserve for ecological research in 1944 and the trees, shrubs and ground vegetation have been recorded in detail ever since. The 70 years of observations now represent one of the largest and most detailed records in Europe of how a woodland develops under the influence of natural factors. The observations have generated a series of papers since 1987 and have contributed to meta-analyses of long-term change across temperate Europe and North America, but there has never been a general account of the wood as a research reserve, save for articles in British Wildlife in 1995 and 2005. The main record comprises detailed measurements of 20,000 individual trees and shrubs, from which the performance of populations of oak, beech, ash, limes, etc. can be quantified in detail, and the development of a near-natural wood and the factors influencing it can be detailed. The book also makes reference to woods elsewhere in Britain and Europe. It mainly deals with populations of native tree species, individually and collectively. It also broadens out to consider the implications for nature conservation, re-wilding and remoteness, near-to-nature forestry, monitoring and long-term ecological research, the meaning of natural woodland, and even aspects of woodland history UR - https://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781780648651.0000 ER -