NATURALISTS OF THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE - THE BACKBONE OF NATURE CONSERVATION

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1000 YEARS OF NATURAL HISTORY

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NATURALISTS OF THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE - THE BACKBONE OF NATURE CONSERVATION BARONESS YOUNG I looked at the title and thought ‘Well that says it all really there is nothing more to say’, but there is a lot more to say. It is true that long before conservation was invented there were naturalists. Naturalists strode the earth like dinosaurs, and they had shared common characteristics: they had a fascination for the natural word, a thirst for knowledge, a feel for investigation and classification, analysis and cataloguing. Some of them also had the shared characteristic of being intrepid and brave, particularly those who strode out into foreign parts and discovered new species and habitats. Some of them were excellent at science, others were less strong in that department. Let’s just look at some of the great naturalists of the past millennium. We all of course have heard of Darwin. Darwin operated at the level of establishing “universal truths”. I went to the Galapagos to see his finches and one can understand the feeling of excitement he must have had going from island to island. Seeing these finches as a piece of living evolution with small differences eventually mounting up to large differences between the smaller and the larger finches. It was a great kick for me recently to go to Tring and handle a specimen with a label written in Darwin’s own hand. Gilbert White, another famous naturalist, operated at the other end of the scale. He didn’t sail the world looking for “universal truths”. He sat in Selborne and catalogued, in a meticulous day-inday-out way, Selborne’s natural history. Gilbert White was not brilliant at science (he thought that swallows over-wintered at the bottom of ponds) but, nevertheless, the meticulous documentation of Selborne’s natural history gives us a very living picture of what a piece of English countryside looked like 250 years ago to compare with the Selborne in modern age. It was quite a vivid evocation of the change when the Daily Telegraph, at the last celebration of Gilbert White’s anniversary, came up with the theory that there is actually more biodiversity in Selborne now than when Gilbert White was around. What they hadn’t quite noticed was that some of the rarer, more special creatures, plants and animals were gone and what we had a lot of was collared doves, magpies and carrion crows. So as far as biodiversity is concerned volume is not enough. The diversity of biodiversity is just as important and naturalists of course are very much into the diversity of biodiversity. My favourite naturalist from history of course is Audubon - being a bird person you couldn’t expect anything else. Audubon had that wonderful trait of early naturalists - he shot and ate everything that he described and catalogued. Reading Audubon’s text and looking at his pictures one is forced to remember that it is only comparatively recently that we have had the luxury of modern techniques and modern science and modern technology to enable us to study wildlife at closer quarters. I had a modern Audubon experience recently in Wales. R.S.P.B. was about to be given a very nice piece of wetland in Wales as a gift from an elderly lady who wanted to have it properly looked after, after she passed on. I was walking round the ‘about-to-be reserve’ with her and there was a small wooden duck hunting lodge close to one of the open

Trans. Suffolk Nat. Soc. 36 (2000)


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