The Nature Book Series: The Badger Book

Author:   Jo Byrne ,  Jane Russ
Publisher:   Graffeg Limited
ISBN:  

9781913634209


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   29 March 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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The Nature Book Series: The Badger Book


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Overview

The Badger Book takes its place as part of Graffeg's compact, accessible Nature Book series, exploring our relationship with some of Britain's best-loved wild creatures. This addition introduces the wonderfully mysterious and enigmatic Meles meles to the newly curious with fresh information in store for those with a long-standing interest. An inhabitant of British land for thousands of years, badgers have been both revered and reviled, cherished and tormented, beloved and brutalized The Badger Book takes a closer look at Britain's largest carnivorous mammal. Alongside magical photography, we examine the science and politics around bTB and the controversial badger cull as well as introducing a passionate group of ordinary people dedicated to rescuing them, followed by a meander through the myth, legend, art and literature which has incorporated them into British culture. Chapters include: Badger Physiology, Badger Watching, Badger Threats, The Cull, The Badger Protectors: Wounded Badger, Patrol Cheshire Badgers in Myth & Legend, Badgers in Art & Literature.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jo Byrne ,  Jane Russ
Publisher:   Graffeg Limited
Imprint:   Graffeg Limited
Dimensions:   Width: 15.00cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 15.00cm
ISBN:  

9781913634209


ISBN 10:   1913634205
Pages:   160
Publication Date:   29 March 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Reviews

The Badger Book takes its place as part of Graffeg's compact, accessible Nature Book series, exploring our relationship with some of Britain's best-loved wild creatures. This addition introduces the wonderfully mysterious and enigmatic Meles meles to the newly curious with fresh information in store for those with a long-standing interest. An inhabitant of these lands for thousands of years, badgers have been both revered and reviled, cherished and tormented, beloved and brutalised – The Badger Book takes a closer look at Britain's largest carnivorous mammal. Alongside magical photography, we examine the science – and politics – around bTB and the controversial badger cull as well as introducing a passionate group of ordinary people dedicated to rescuing them, followed by a meander through the myth, legend, art and literature which has incorporated them into our culture. Other titles in the series: - The Hare Book - The Red Squirrel Book - The Bee Book - The Fox Book - The Owl Book - The Robin Book - The Hedgehog Book -- Publisher: Graffeg This is the eighth in Graffeg’s series of books devoted to individual animals, birds and insects, including the hare, the red squirrel, the robin, and the bee – the latter also written by Jo Byrne. The books are very handsomely produced in a chunky 15.5cms square format, with lavish full-page photographs which accompany an essay on the animal in question. Jo Byrne begins with the physiology of the badger, which is a member of the mustelid family that includes weasels, ferrets and otters. Individuals, we are told, weigh up to 20 kilos, and their earliest known fossils go back two million years. Their eyes and ears are small, although they can see and hear well enough, but their sense of smell is some 800 times better than ours, so if you want a chance of sighting badgers you had better keep down wind of them. They live, as everybody knows, in sets, which have separate chambers devoted to nesting and sleeping, as well as latrines, though mostly they are careful to defecate outside the set. They eat almost anything. Worms are a favourite, but fruit, frogs, beetles, and hedgehogs are all acceptable. They don’t hibernate exactly, but remain in the set for long periods in winter, lowering their metabolism and using up body fat. They are territorial, and fight to defend their patch. The reader learns this and much more in a well-written text which imparts a great deal of information in an accessible way. It is not the whole story, unfortunately. Badger populations throughout Britain remain strong, but one wonders for how long. The biggest threat to their survival is the motor vehicle – about 50,000 are killed each year on the roads, and that amounts to something like 20 percent of the total population. (The only badger I have ever seen was a dead one by the side of the road through our village, evidently knocked down by a car.) Then there are the controversial culls – over 120,000 killed since 2015 – which together with illegal killings, the cruel ‘sport’ of badger-baiting, and habitat loss, exert great pressure on badger populations. Jo Byrne discusses the cull in some detail. It is still very much contested as to whether badgers pass on TB to cows, as dairy farmers claim, and many thousands of these animals may have been killed for nothing. Cow-to-cow transmission is equally likely to be the cause, if not more so. She discusses opposition to the cull, especially the Wounded Badger Patrol in Cheshire, whose members patrol the countryside at night, their presence deterring licensed ‘free shooters’, and helping to save badgers that have been shot and wounded. Two final sections discuss the badger in folklore, art, and literature. The Badger Book is an excellent addition to Graffeg’s series. It is the place to go if you want to learn more about these fascinating animals. -- John Barnie @ www.gwales.com


Author Information

Jo Byrne is a passionate animal welfare and animal rights champion living in a relatively rural town in Bedfordshire. Bonkers about all wildlife as well as being the very epitome of a 'crazy cat-lady', home usually consists of two permanent-resident cats, one or two foster cats, and a slew of regular wildlife visitors. The Bee Book, her first title for Graffeg, published in May 2019.

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