Bryophytes are a species-rich group in Britain and Ireland and one which includes numerous species which are rare in mainland Europe. They are attractive plants and some of them play a major ecological role in the environment.
All 1069 species of hornworts, mosses and liverworts are mapped in this Atlas of British and Irish Bryophytes 2 volume set. It replaces the earlier, 3-volume Atlas (1991–94), updating it with the results of 20 years’ further fieldwork by members of the British Bryological Society. This has resulted in the discovery of 59 new species and increased the number of records on which the maps are based from 770,000 to 2.83 million. The hectad (10 × 10 km square) maps reveal dramatic changes in the distribution of some species since 1990. Each map is accompanied by a detailed text covering habitat, reproductive biology, significant range changes, taxonomic or recording problems and world distribution. The altitudinal distribution of most species in Britain is illustrated by a novel diagram, and the species accounts are accompanied by numerous habitat photographs. The introductory chapters describe the history of the BBS recording scheme, highlighting the effect of technological changes since 1990, and map environmental factors relevant to the interpretation of the maps. An important chapter presents a new analysis of the records to identify changes in frequency in recent decades in response to drivers such as air pollution, land-use and climate change.
In his Foreword, Professor John Birks describes the new Atlas as “a truly magnificent achievement” and “a major contribution not only to British and Irish botanical literature but also to international botanical literature”.
2 Volume Set ISBN 9781874357667 (Volume 1 9781874357612, Volume 2 9781874357629)