Abernethy Forest is a nature reserve managed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds in the central Highlands of Scotland, bordering Cairngorms National Park. The trees in this wood are one of the few remaining examples of Caledonian pinewood that are lineal descendants of an ancient forest that once spread across Highland Scotland with veteran trees dating back to the 1600s. This forest is as close as one can get to natural woodland in Britain. Since the Bronze or Iron Age, the forest has been used by people for hunting, exploitation of timber, farming and now nature conservation.
Published by the Centre for Conservation Science of the RSPB, Abernethy Forest: The History and Ecology of an Old Scottish Pinewood is an in-depth account of this forest, richly illustrated with period and contemporary photographs, as well as graphs and maps. The book opens with a description of the physical geography and history of the forest, covering both the changes caused by people and the natural processes that have shaped the forest.
These processes provide an environment for an astonishing diversity of wildlife, with over 3,800 species of plants, fungi and animals, some of which is not found in such abundance elsewhere in the UK. The bulk of the book is dedicated to describing this rich and diverse wildlife, including sections on the invertebrates and fungi and lichens found here.
Comparisons are drawn with near-natural and natural forests in continental Europe, revealing the conservation measures that need to be taken to restore lost features in an attempt to create a present-natural forest that extends to a natural treeline. Attention is also paid to the role of fire and controlled burning.
Eight appendices give species names, Scottish place names, chemistry of local lochs, a list of coldest and warmest summers, locations of archaeological features, 19th century national census data when farmsteads in the forest were occupied, ecological methods employed, and a glossary.
Foreword
1. Introduction
1.1 Boreal forests
1.2 Geography
1.3 Rocks and soils
1.4 Climate
Acid rain
1.5 The status of Abernethy Forest
Definitions
2. The history of the forest
2.1 Colonisation by trees
Vegetation changes during the Holocene
2.2 Old maps of Abernethy Forest
2.3 The owners
2.4 Woodland use since medieval times
Local use
Wider commercial exploitation
2.5 Farming
2.6 Hunting and game management
2.7 Summary
3. Plants
3.1 Plant communities
3.2 Mosses and liverworts
3.3 Ferns
3.4 Herbs
3.5 Shrubs
Heather
Blaeberry
Cowberry
Juniper
3.6 Trees
Scots Pine
The forest structure
Broadleaf trees
3.7 Summary
4. Fire
4.1 Fire ecology
4.2 Fire and animals
4.3 Fires at Abernethy Forest
4.4 Fire experiments at Abernethy Forest
4.5 Summary
5. Fungi and lichens
5.1 Fungi
Fungal diversity
The effect of cutting and burning the shrub layer
The role of fungi in the food web
5.2 Lichens
5.3 Summary
6. Invertebrates
6.1 Molluscs
6.2 Millipedes and centipedes
6.3 Spiders, harvestmen and ticks
6.4 Insects
Dragonflies and damselflies
Butterflies and moths
Bugs
Flies
Bees, wasps and ants
Beetles
6.5 Soil invertebrates
6.6 Deadwood invertebrates
6.7 Summary
7. Vertebrates
7.1 Fish
7.2 Amphibians and reptiles
7.3 Birds
The bird community
Capercaillie
Black Grouse
Crested Tit
Crossbills
Great Spotted Woodpecker
Crows
Woodcock
Bullfinch
Redstart and Tree Pipit
Osprey
Goldeneye
Summary for birds
7.4 Mammals
Deer
Experiments with cattle
Red Fox
Wildcat
Pine Marten
Other mustelids
Bats
Red Squirrel
Small mammals
Summary for mammals
8. Abernethy Forest in context
8.1 A Scottish context
Comparisons with other Caledonian pinewoods
Comparisons with plantations
8.2 A boreal forest context
Fire and other disturbances
Tree species, sizes and ages
Deadwood
Forest size
8.3 Summary
9. Conservation management
9.1 Introduction
A changing attitude
Statutory protection
Conservation on the ground
9.2 Biodiversity
Old trees
Deadwood
Broadleaf trees
Reintroducing extinct animals
Shrub layer management
9.3 Reversing soil damage
9.4 Forest fragmentation
Woodland size
Isolation
Edge effects
Internal fragmentation
Reducing fragmentation
9.5 Forest fences
9.6 Human disturbance
9.7 The cultural significance of Abernethy Forest
9.8 Climate change
9.9 Research and management
Habitat management
Wildlife management
9.10 Final thoughts on Caledonian pinewoods
References
Appendices
1 Common and scientific names of species
2 Place names
3 Loch chemistry
4 The coldest and warmest summers
5 Locations of archaeological features
6 Ten-year national censuses
7 Methods in forest ecology
8 Glossary
Biography of the author
Index
"[...] [Abernethy Forest is] a great place to visit, but does the book help someone appreciate and understand the reserve from afar? Yes, It does. It covers the gamut of history, abiotic setting, its place in wider Europe, and the range of organisms found within its borders, including fungi and lichens as well as the expected plants and animals. The text is bursting with insights into the ecology of the species and how they interact. There is also a pleasingly long chapter on conservation, past and present. [...] Its central core of helping the reader understand how the reserve works, including the ecology of its inhabitants, is really very good. It's very readable, and will be easily understood by policymakers [...] The price is also remarkably cheap for the quality and quantity of information. This should be on everyone's reading list."
– Peter Thomas, The Niche, March 2019
"[...] The book is lavishly illustrated with maps, diagrams and photographs, mostly by the author himself. The fungus and lichen photos are especially pleasing. The text is rich in detail, yet remarkably readable. I would have welcomed more insight into some of the main characters who have contributed to the reserve, and a little more personal anecdote to colour the text, like Summers’ evocative account of counting Capercaillie at their leks. I like the simple use of numbers, highlighted in green, to direct the reader to the comprehensive reference list at the end; this greatly aids the flow of the text. Only the index grates; to find out about frogs on the reserve, for example, you need to remember that the species is the Common Frog and search under C.
Anyone with an interest in Abernethy or its component communities should read the book to enhance their appreciation of an inspirational place. Forest ecologists will particularly value Appendix 7, detailing the management methods used on the reserve. Managers of other reserves should read the book as guidance on the level of understanding to which they should aspire in managing their own sites. Resource-starved management staff from the government agencies may simply read it and weep!"
– Michael Scott, British Wildlife 30(1), October 2018