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Wetlands: A Threatened Landscape

ISBN: 978-0-631-19199-5

October 1993

Wiley-Blackwell

400 pages

Description
Wetlands occupy some six per cent of the Earth's land surface. They vary from fens and freshwater marshes to tropical mangroves and tundra swamps. They perform vital hydrological, chemical and biological roles and contain unique and diverse forms of wildlife and habitat. They are disappearing at an alarming rate and are threatened by both the direct and indirect effects of human activity. The purpose of this book of especially commissioned articles is threefold: (a) to explore the occurrence and composition of wetlands and their physical and biological dynamics; (b) to consider the impact upon them of agriculture, industry, urbanisation and recreation; and (c) to examine what steps can be taken to manage and to preserve their future survival.
About the Author
Michael Williams is Reader in Geography at the University of Oxford. He has written and published extensively in the fields of environmental science and landscape history.
Features
  • The most comprehensive appraisal of the world's wetlands ever published
  • Extensively illustrated with original maps and photographs
  • Draws together and evaluates work from a very wide range of disciplines in the natural sciences, environmental science, geography, history, engineering and planning.