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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.

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Good Reads  Habitats & Ecosystems  Forests & Wetlands

How Trees Can Save the World

By: Peter Wohlleben(Author), Jane Billinghurst(Translated by)
272 pages, no illustrations
NHBS
How Trees Can Save the World sounds a warning against the dangers of tree planting while championing natural forest restoration. Read our Q&A with Peter Wohlleben.
How Trees Can Save the World
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  • How Trees Can Save the World ISBN: 9780008447243 Paperback Mar 2024 In stock
    £7.99 £10.99
    #263500
Price: £7.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles Recommended titles

About this book

Please note that this book was originally published in hardback by Greystone Books with the title The Power of Trees.

In his beloved book The Hidden Life of Trees, Peter Wohlleben revealed astonishing discoveries about the social networks of trees and how they communicate. Now, in How Trees Can Save the World, he turns to their future, with a searing critique of forestry management, tree planting and the exploitation of old-growth forests.

As human-caused climate change devastates the planet, forests play a critical role in keeping it habitable. While politicians and business leaders would have us believe that cutting down forests can be offset by mass tree planting, Wohlleben offers a warning: many tree planting schemes lead to ecological disaster. Not only are these trees more susceptible to disease, flooding, fires and landslides, we need to understand that forests are more than simply a collection of trees. Instead, they are ecosystems that consist of thousands of species, from animals to fungi and bacteria. The way to save trees, and ourselves? Step aside and let forests – which are naturally better equipped to face environmental challenges – heal themselves.

With the warmth and wonder familiar to readers from his previous books, Wohlleben also shares emerging scientific research about how forests shape climates both locally and across continents; that trees adapt to changing environmental conditions through passing knowledge down to their offspring; and how old growth may in fact have the most survival strategies for climate change.

At the heart of How Trees Can Save the World lies Wohlleben's passionate plea: that our survival is dependent on trusting ancient forests and allowing them to thrive.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Peter Wohlleben spent over twenty years working for the Forestry Commission in Germany before leaving to put his ideas of ecology into practice. He now runs an environmentally-friendly woodland, where he works for the return of primaeval forests. He is the author of numerous books about trees, including the bestselling The Hidden Life of Trees.

By: Peter Wohlleben(Author), Jane Billinghurst(Translated by)
272 pages, no illustrations
NHBS
How Trees Can Save the World sounds a warning against the dangers of tree planting while championing natural forest restoration. Read our Q&A with Peter Wohlleben.
Media reviews

"If we don't learn to leave the trees alone, the trees will eventually be alone anyway – but without us. Wohlleben brilliantly and readably shows us how urgent and how hard it is to do nothing."
Guardian

"In clear, vivid prose and with impeccable reasoning, Peter Wohlleben makes a compelling case that almost everything we do in modern forestry management may be dead wrong. What should we do instead? Let the wisdom of the trees quell our human arrogance, heal the forest, and restore our sweet, green world."
– Sy Montgomery, author of Soul of an Octopus and How to Be A Good Creature

"Trees, says Peter Wohlleben, have wisdom. So does he. In this magisterial take on how forests can save the planet from our worst endeavours, the German forester warns us against the hubris of tree planting. For their forest wisdom is greater than ours. Planting is usually bad, a "giant PR operation". Instead, he says, the world needs the quiet magic of natural forest restoration. We are, at best, stewards of the world's forests. We must stand back and let them grow."
– Fred Pearce, author of A Trillion Trees: Restoring Our Forests by Trusting in Nature

"The Power of Trees sends a powerful message that humankind will not survive unless we revolutionize the way we conserve and manage our planet's dwindling forests. Through eye-opening stories, Wohlleben underscores how trees and the biodiversity of the natural world present us with critically important solutions to the climate crisis. [It is an important wakeup call for individuals and large-scale forest managers alike!]"
– Jeffrey Horowitz, founder of Avoided Deforestation Partners and founding trustee of the Jane Goodall Legacy Foundation

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