Collins New Naturalist – 89 – The Broads – The People’s Wetland – First Edition – 2001

Moss, Brian

£35.00

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Product Description

Collins New Naturalist – 89 – The Broads – The People’s Wetland – First Edition – 2001

 

Author: Moss, Brian
Publisher: Collins
Price: £35 including postage in the UK
Publication Date: 2001
Edition: First edition
Size: Octavo
Binding: Original green cloth. Dustwrapper
Condition: Fine in fine dustwrapper

Condition:

 

Dustwrapper artwork by Robert Gillmor. Cloth bright and clean with clean text block. A fine, tight, clean copy in fine, clean dustwrapper which is very slightly faded. We usually have first editions of all the New Naturalist Series in stock, please contact us for more details.

The Broads – The People’s Wetland: New Naturalist 89: A Brief Overview

 

Overview

The Broads: The People’s Wetland, volume 89 in the Collins New Naturalist series (published 2001), is a comprehensive natural history of the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads, one of Britain’s most distinctive lowland wetland systems. The subtitle is deliberate: the Broads are not purely natural lakes, but landscapes created through human activity and sustained by ongoing management.

The volume exemplifies the mature New Naturalist approach: integrative, ecologically rigorous, historically grounded, and conservation-aware.

Geological and Historical Foundations

Artificial origins

A central argument of the book is that the Broads are not natural lakes but flooded medieval peat diggings. During the Middle Ages, peat was extracted extensively for fuel. Subsequent sea-level rise, land subsidence, and drainage changes allowed these excavations to fill with water, forming the shallow “broads” seen today.

This origin explains:

  • Their characteristic depth profiles
  • The distribution of open water and marsh
  • The intimate relationship between hydrology and land use

Coastal influence

The Broads sit within a low-lying coastal plain subject to:

  • Tidal influence from the North Sea
  • Salinity intrusion
  • Flood risk

The book emphasises how even small shifts in sea level or river flow can reshape the entire system.

Hydrology and Wetland Ecology

Rivers and broads

The system centres on rivers such as:

  • The Bure
  • The Yare
  • The Waveney

These slow-moving rivers connect numerous broads, creating a mosaic of open water, reedbed, grazing marsh, and carr woodland.

Water chemistry, nutrient loading, and sedimentation are analysed in detail, showing how shallow lakes are particularly sensitive to ecological imbalance.

Reedbeds and fen

The Broads contain some of Britain’s most extensive reedbeds, supporting:

  • Specialist birds (bittern, marsh harrier, bearded tit)
  • Rare invertebrates
  • Characteristic fen plant communities

The book explains how traditional reed cutting once maintained open habitats and how abandonment can lead to scrub encroachment.

Grazing marsh

Grazed marshland, divided by ditches (“dykes”), is another defining feature. These wet grasslands support:

  • Wading birds
  • Aquatic plants
  • Invertebrate diversity

The ecological value of controlled grazing is discussed as a case study in working conservation.

Flora

The flora reflects:

  • Base-rich fen conditions
  • Gradients from freshwater to brackish environments
  • Subtle changes in water depth and nutrient status

Rare and localised species are analysed in relation to hydrological stability and management practices.

Fauna

Birds

Birdlife is one of the Broads’ defining features. The book provides detailed accounts of:

  • Breeding marsh harriers
  • Recovering bittern populations
  • Wintering wildfowl
  • Passage migrants

The wetland mosaic supports both resident specialists and seasonal visitors.

Invertebrates

The Broads are nationally important for dragonflies, beetles, and aquatic invertebrates. Many species depend on:

  • Unpolluted ditch systems
  • Stable water levels
  • Specific vegetation structures

Invertebrates are treated as ecological indicators rather than marginal curiosities.

Fish and aquatic life

Shallow, nutrient-sensitive waters support fish communities including:

  • Pike
  • Bream
  • Roach

The book discusses eutrophication and its effects on submerged macrophytes and fish balance.

Human Use and Cultural Landscape

Drainage and engineering

Wind pumps, embankments, and drainage systems are not incidental but central to the Broads’ survival. Without active management:

  • Reedbeds would succeed to scrub
  • Marshes would dry or flood unpredictably
  • Navigation channels would silt up

The Broads are therefore presented as a managed wetland, dependent on continued intervention.

Recreation and navigation

Boating is a defining characteristic. The volume addresses:

  • Leisure navigation
  • Bank erosion
  • Water pollution
  • Balancing access with ecological protection

Unlike remote upland volumes in the series, this book confronts the complexities of a landscape that is both fragile and heavily used.

Conservation Context (circa 2001)

By 2001, the Broads Authority had been established, reflecting recognition of the area’s national importance. The book situates conservation within:

  • Catchment-wide water management
  • Agricultural runoff control
  • Habitat restoration
  • Long-term monitoring

Climate change and sea-level rise are acknowledged as emerging pressures.

Place within the New Naturalist Series

Volume 89 represents:

  • The series’ strong engagement with wetland ecology
  • A continuation of landscape-scale monographs
  • Increasing attention to conservation policy and governance

It complements volumes such as Freshwater Fishes and The Hebrides, but is unique in foregrounding a landscape that is explicitly shaped by people.

Concluding Assessment

The Broads: The People’s Wetland (New Naturalist 89, 2001) is a nuanced and authoritative study of one of Britain’s most complex lowland ecosystems. Its central insight—that the Broads are neither pristine wilderness nor mere recreation ground, but a cultural wetland sustained by careful management—gives the volume enduring relevance.

By integrating hydrology, ecology, history, and policy, it demonstrates that long-term conservation in such landscapes depends not on withdrawal, but on informed, adaptive stewardship.

As a regional synthesis at the turn of the twenty-first century, it remains a valuable benchmark against which subsequent environmental change in central Scotland can be measured.

The Collins New Naturalist Series: A Brief Overview

Introduction

 

The Collins New Naturalist series is one of the most significant and enduring achievements in British natural history publishing. Launched in 1945 by William Collins, Sons & Co. (now HarperCollins), the series set out to provide authoritative yet accessible accounts of British wildlife, habitats, and ecological principles. Over the decades it has become both a scientific resource and a cultural artefact, revered by naturalists, collectors, researchers, and book lovers alike.

The longevity and influence of the series stem from its commitment to expert authorship, high editorial standards, and a consistent mission: to bring the study of nature to the general reader without compromising scientific integrity.

Origins and Founding Vision

 

The series emerged in post-war Britain, during a period when public interest in the natural world was expanding. Scientific knowledge had accelerated rapidly during the first half of the twentieth century, and there was a growing appetite for well-written, engaging texts that could bridge the divide between academic research and amateur natural history.

The founding editors—most notably Sir Julian Huxley, James Fisher, and Dudley Stamp—had a clear and ambitious vision:

  • To promote ecological literacy among the wider public
  • To document the natural history of the British Isles in a coherent, scientifically rigorous format
  • To invite leading authorities in their fields to contribute specialist volumes
  • To cultivate an informed readership capable of understanding conservation issues

This vision aligned with a broader national desire to reconnect with the British landscape after the dislocation of the war years.

The Early Volumes

 

The first title, Butterflies by E. B. Ford, set the tone for the series: scholarly yet readable, richly illustrated, and grounded in the most current scientific thinking of its time. The format was instantly recognisable: octavo hardbacks with striking dust-jacket designs by the celebrated artists Clifford and Rosemary Ellis. These covers remain iconic for their bold, stylised depictions of flora and fauna.

Early volumes covered a wide range of subjects, including:

  • Birds
  • Wild Flowers
  • British Plant Life
  • Mushrooms and Toadstools
  • The Sea Shore

The series helped unify disparate strands of biological knowledge, presenting them in a systematic programme that readers could follow book by book.

Editorial Philosophy and Scientific Approach

 

The New Naturalist books have always been written by experts—academics, professional naturalists, ecologists, and field researchers—who bring first-hand experience and original research to their subjects.

Key editorial principles include:

  1. Accuracy and Depth

Each volume is grounded in contemporary scientific understanding, often incorporating cutting-edge research. Many authors have been leading authorities in their fields.

  1. Accessibility

Although scholarly, the books avoid jargon and are aimed at a broad readership. Field observations, historical anecdotes, and clear explanations help convey complex ecological processes.

  1. Ecological Perspective

The series pioneered ecosystem-based approaches, examining species and habitats within broader environmental contexts. This ecological viewpoint was ahead of its time and has contributed to the series’ enduring relevance.

  1. Long-term Documentation

Many volumes remain standards in their fields; some have become important historical records of environmental change across the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

Design and Production

The visual identity of the series is a major part of its appeal. The Ellis designs, used for most of the twentieth century, are among the most recognisable dust-jackets in publishing history. They combine decorative patterning with scientifically accurate depictions, transforming each book into an artwork as well as a source of information.

Internally, the books are distinguished by:

  • High-quality monochrome photographs
  • Detailed diagrams and distribution maps
  • Clear typography and durable binding

Collectors prize first editions for their craftsmanship and rarity, particularly those with unfaded, unpriced jackets.

Themes and Range of Subjects

 

The scope of the New Naturalist is unusually broad, covering:

  • Individual species groups (e.g., dragonflies, bats, hedgehogs)
  • Ecosystems and habitats (e.g., moorlands, woodlands, the sea shore)
  • Geographic regions (e.g., the Hebrides, the New Forest, the Yorkshire Dales)
  • Ecological phenomena (e.g., animal migration, climate and the landscape)
  • Human–nature interactions (e.g., conservation, farming and wildlife)

This diversity ensures that the series provides a near-encyclopaedic survey of British natural history.

Evolution and Continuing Legacy

 

Despite changes in publishing and scientific practice, the New Naturalist series has continued into the twenty-first century with new volumes commissioned regularly. Contemporary authors maintain the tradition of expert, research-led writing, while incorporating modern ecological concerns such as:

  • Biodiversity loss
  • Rewilding
  • Climate change
  • Shifting baselines in environmental science

The series also serves as a historical archive, documenting ecological changes across nearly eighty years. Early volumes can be read alongside recent ones to trace shifts in species distribution, land use, and national conservation priorities.

Impact on British Natural History

 

The New Naturalist series has shaped generations of British naturalists, influencing both professional scientific development and amateur enthusiasm. Its contributions include:

  • Inspiring careers in ecology, zoology, and conservation
  • Providing reference texts for universities, libraries, and field groups
  • Raising public awareness of environmental issues long before they became mainstream
  • Preserving detailed accounts of habitats and species now threatened or transformed

For many readers, the series has been a gateway to lifelong engagement with the natural world.

Collecting and Cultural Status

 

Beyond its scientific importance, the New Naturalist series is a major collecting field. First editions in pristine condition can command high prices, particularly rare or limited print runs. The combination of scholarly value, artistic design, and bibliophilic appeal gives many volumes a dual identity as both scientific texts and cultural objects.

Special editions, including leather-bound or slip-cased versions, have added further layers of desirability among collectors.

Conclusion

 

The Collins New Naturalist series stands as a monumental achievement in British publishing and environmental education. It has succeeded, for nearly eight decades, in balancing scientific rigour with literary clarity, making complex ecological knowledge available to the general reader. Its influence on conservation, ecological awareness, and natural history writing is profound and enduring.

Through its expert authorship, iconic design, and unwavering commitment to quality, the series remains a cornerstone of British natural history and continues to inspire readers, researchers, and collectors alike.

Cataloguer: Daniel Hornsey of Hornseys, Ripon: Specialist Dealer in First Editions and Fine Copies of the Collins New Naturalist Series

 

Daniel Hornsey, a partner of Hornseys in Ripon, is widely regarded as a trusted specialist in the field of modern British natural history books, with a particularly strong reputation for handling first editions and fine copies of the Collins New Naturalist series. His expertise has been built over many years of professional bookselling, during which he has developed a deep understanding of the series’ publishing history, bibliographic nuances, and the specific qualities that distinguish truly exceptional copies.

As a long-standing member of the antiquarian book trade, he has advised private collectors, curated catalogues, and sourced works for leading dealers, libraries and institutions across the world.

Hornseys, an established independent bookshop and gallery, is known for its careful curation and its emphasis on quality. Under Daniel Hornsey’s guidance, the shop has become a respected destination for collectors seeking rare, well-preserved, and accurately described volumes. He is recognised for his meticulous approach to condition assessment, his knowledge of dust-jacket variants and print histories, and his ability to source scarce titles—including early post-war first impressions, fine first editions and variant editions.

Collectors value his transparency, his attention to detail, and his commitment to presenting books exactly as they are, without exaggeration. This reliability is essential in a field where subtle differences in condition or printing can dramatically influence desirability and value. Whether advising a new collector or assisting an experienced bibliophile in completing a long-standing run, Daniel Hornsey combines practical bookselling experience with a genuine enthusiasm for the New Naturalist series.

Through Hornseys, he continues to contribute to the preservation, appreciation, and responsible circulation of these landmark works of British natural history publishing.

Hornseys’ exhibit regularly at book and map fairs in London and throughout the UK and as long-established specialists in fine books, maps, prints and ephemera, Hornseys maintains full professional membership of the Provincial Booksellers Fairs Association (PBFA). The PBFA is one of the most respected trade bodies in the rare and antiquarian book world, with strict standards of expertise, authenticity and ethical trading. Our verified member listing can be viewed here: Hornseys – PBFA Member Profile.

Why buy from us?

 

At Hornseys, we are committed to offering items that meet the highest standards of quality and authenticity. Our book collection is meticulously curated to ensure that each edition is a valuable and authentic piece of bibliographical history. Here’s what sets us apart:

  • Authenticity and Provenance: Every book is researched, collated, and verified for authenticity.
  • Expert Curation: Each book is selected with a keen eye for significance, condition, and rarity, ensuring a collection that is both diverse and distinguished.
  • Customer Satisfaction: We strive to provide an exceptional customer experience, from detailed descriptions and provenance to secure and prompt delivery of your purchase.
  • Returns Policy: We offer an unconditional guarantee on every item. If you wish to make a return, books may be sent back to us within fourteen days of receipt for any reason. We request advance notification of returns, and books must be returned in the same condition as sent for a full refund.

Explore Our Collection:

 

Visit Hornseys to explore our fine collection of rare and signed books. Whether you are an avid collector or looking for a special gift, our selection offers something truly unique. Located in the picturesque Yorkshire Dales, our Ripon gallery has been a haven for book lovers, art enthusiasts, and collectors since 1976.

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