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Beetle mania

New Naturalist: Nature Conservation by Peter Marren, Collins, £19.99, ISBN 0007113064 Reviewed by Gail Vines

OVER the past few decades, “saving” wildlife has become a cause célèbre across much of Europe and North America. In Britain alone, a once-obscure charity devoted to the “protection of birds” now has more than a million members.

Even central government has grudgingly come to add nature conservation to its political agenda in recent years. The plight of the flamingo moss and the narrow-headed ant, for example, are now officially recognised in Britain’s “Biodiversity Action Plan”. Awesomely boring reports abound.

But is any of this working? In Nature Conservation, Peter Marren sets out to examine the track record of conservationists in Britain from 1950 to 2001.

His verdict is far from reassuring. More and more people say they support conservation, yet the countryside is far less wild and fascinating than it was only a few decades ago. County by county, the British countryside is steadily losing wild animals and plants.

So who’s to blame? Marren casts a critical eye at conservation officialdom, which he knows from the inside, having worked for 13 years as local officer, writer and editor for the government’s Nature Conservancy Council. Now a freelance field naturalist and writer, Marren is in a good position to see where the mountains of plans and committees are taking us.

“To read some conservation reports,” writes Marren, “you could be forgiven for mistaking species and habitats for a substance, like bubblegum, that will roll off the conveyor line in measured quantities once you set up the right inputs.” Libertarian by instinct, Marren is intrinsically suspicious of planners, and of the current talk of grand-scale habitat creation schemes. Such “drawing-board conservation” is likely to lead to a “McDonald’s version of Britain, much the same from top to bottom, without meaning or detail”.

Marren longs for the rebirth of old-style popular natural history, where all sorts of people take a knowledgeable interest in the wild birds, bugs and wildflowers around them. Such a grassroots resurgence would do more to safeguard our countryside than any number of official reports, he implies.

It is always a mistake, he argues, to see wild animals and plants as pets or targets, when the wonder of them lies in their very otherness – their indifference to us and their resistance to human management. “To break free, naturalists will have to put the conservation industry behind them for a while,” says Marren, “and rediscover that older quality embodied in the credo of the New Naturalist series, that ‘inquiring spirit’.”

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