To see accurate pricing, please choose your delivery country.
 
 
United States
£ GBP
All Shops

British Wildlife

8 issues per year 84 pages per issue Subscription only

British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

Subscriptions from £33 per year

Conservation Land Management

4 issues per year 44 pages per issue Subscription only

Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.

Subscriptions from £26 per year
Field Guides & Natural History  Mycology

British Boletes With Keys to Species

Field / Identification Guide Identification Key
By: Geoffrey Kibby(Author)
78 pages, 104 colour photos and b/w line drawings, colour illustrations
British Boletes
Click to have a closer look
  • British Boletes Edition: 8 Spiralbound Sep 2017 In stock
    £22.99
    #209189
Price: £22.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles Recommended titles
Images Additional images
British BoletesBritish BoletesBritish BoletesBritish Boletes

About this book

An excellent concise and well illustrated monograph to British and most European Boletes. Boletes are some of the most popular fungi around the world, both because they are often choice edibles and also because of their frequently exotic colours and large size. There are approximately 80 species in Britain and this book aims to provides user-friendly identification keys and descriptions to all the known species along with colour photos of the majority of species.

This new edition includes numerous new generic names based upon recent molecular studies, resulting in the genera Boletus and Xerocomus in particular being broken up.

Read 'Mushroom Identification: pro Tips from Top UK Mycologists' on the NHBS Blog.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Geoffrey Kibby is currently the Senior Editor of the mycological journal Field Mycology and has studied fungi for over 40 years in Britain, America and the tropics. He is the author of numerous books and field guides to fungi.

Field / Identification Guide Identification Key
By: Geoffrey Kibby(Author)
78 pages, 104 colour photos and b/w line drawings, colour illustrations
Media reviews

Customer Reviews:

Excellent book on the British boletes


by
Boris Assyov, PhD
in
Bulgaria

In the introduction to his The genus Xerocomus the boletologist Alan Hills wrote "If you want a key written, ask Geoffrey". I can add nothing to his statement that will better describe Geoffrey's new book on the British boletes that was just presented to the mycological community.

There is hardly any need to present the author. Geoffrey Kibby is Senior Editor of the journal Field Mycology and most of the readers possibly have enjoyed already his mycological papers or his monograph British species of the genus Russula. Apart from that Geoffrey is a nature photographer and artist who has contributed illustrations to many books and articles.

British Boletes is a marvelous edition that is simply not to be missed by any mycologist. It is printed on high-quality sturdy A4-sized paper that ensures it will not wear out easily even if you are often taking it with you in the field. In addition the wire binding is excellent finishing that lets the book open flat.

Yet from the same beginning I would like to say – do not get confused by the word "British", because the book actually presents the vast majority of the known European boletes, except very few species, so it is suitable to be used in most realms in Europe. I also believe that this decision will greatly help the British mycological community in cases, where new country records might be involved, that may otherwise go unnoticed. The readers will easily decide if I am right about this, seeing the new British record Boletus rhodoxanthus and the comments for Boletus luteocupreus.

I am truly amazed by enormous amount of information that is fitted in the book, keeping the text perfectly readable without glasses at the same time. First of all I want to mention the excellent introductory chapters that lead the reader through all the important macroscopic and microscopic features of the boletes, so easily explained and so beautifully illustrated, that even people that have never tackled boletes before will have no problem understanding them.

Reading further on, I very much appreciated the synopsis of the genera. As we all know, bolete systematics has become immensely difficult these days and the constant splitting and lumping sometimes may really puzzle even professional mycologists if they are not especially dealing with this group. I strongly believe that having this book, the reader will no longer suffer with the frequent name changes so generously produced by the modern systematics. Note however, that the author meanwhile takes full advantage of the results of the modern methods of molecular research and keeps the book perfectly up to date.

As the second part of the title suggests, British Boletes provide keys for recognizing the genera and species. This is the first bolete book, known to me that combines the synoptic type of keys (that we all know very well from Geoffrey's other work Leccinum revisited) together with the traditional dichotomous keys. I know there will be people having hesitation about the dichotomous keys, but I will assure them that all the keys in British Boletes are straightforward and work very well.

Not only keys are included in the book, but informative descriptions and remarks on all the species tackled. These are also excellent and help the reader to reach a conclusion when trying to determine bolete collections.

The reader will excuse me, but I decided not to count the illustrations in the book, there are too many of them. I will just say that the book is more than amply illustrated and provides spectacular photographs or original paintings of virtually every British species and of most of the included extralimital boletes. There are excellent photographs for some recently described or ill-illustrated species. I also very much appreciate the comparative painting of the xerocomoid boletes, which is certainly unique and helps very much for the understanding of this very difficult group.

Current promotions
New and Forthcoming BooksBest of WinterNHBS Moth TrapBuyers Guides