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Garden Natural History

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ISBN-10: 0007139934

ISBN-13: 9780007139934

Edition: 2007

Authors: Stefan Buczacki

List price: $85.95
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Description:

A history of gardens in Britain with special reference to the evolution of different styles and the changing importance of native and exotic plant species. How does a garden differ from other habitats, both natural and semi-natural? Is it true that the modern home garden is largely a collection of hybrids between exotic species? These and other questions are answered in New Naturalist: Garden Natural History. It touches on subjects such as plant fertilising, watering, pest and disease control, pesticide usage, greenhouses, lawn mowing, digging, pruning, hedge clipping, protecting plants from wildlife, scarers and traps. It also points out the role of the gardener as a conservator and how…    
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Book details

List price: $85.95
Copyright year: 2007
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Limited
Publication date: 9/28/2007
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 336
Size: 6.25" wide x 9.00" long x 1.25" tall
Weight: 1.980
Language: English

Professor Stefan Buczacki is equally well known as the presenter of many hundreds of radio and television gardening programmes and as one of the country's most experienced non-fiction authors with well over fifty published titles on natural history, gardening and biography, many for HarperCollins. He is a graduate of the Universities of Southampton and Oxford and holds distinctions and awards from many scientific societies as well as honorary degrees.

British gardens - the background
The modern British Garden
The operations of gardening and their impact upon the environment
Gardens in the context of the British ecological landscape
The garden as a habitat to which native plants have adapted
The garden as a habitat to which vertebrates have adapted
The garden as the route by which alien species have been introduced
The slightly more hidden garden
The role of the gardener as conservator
The garden as an inspiration for the naturalist
The garden as a natural history educator
The future of the garden and its likely role in our natural history