The aim of BRC’s publication and research work is to help link volunteer recording efforts to those of research scientists, and develop innovative observational projects that add new insights into large-scale biological processes.
Our research work is summarised within the key themes listed along the right handside of this page.
You can download a booklet which summarises the first 50 years of BRC.
Below is a complete list of our research publications.
Bibliography
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Economy is a better predictor of biological invasions in Europe than geography and climate. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 107, 12157-12162.
(2010) A review of the status and distribution of the subterranean aquatic Crustacea of Britain and Ireland. Cave and Karst Science, 30, 53-74.
(2003) The aquatic plants of the River Cam and its riparian commons, Cambridge, 1660-1999. Nature in Cambridgeshire, 50, 18-37.
(2008) Distribution patterns in British and Irish liverworts and hornworts. Journal of Bryology, 3-17.
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The Mediterranean-Atlantic and Atlantic elements in the Cornish flora. In: Botanical links in the Atlantic arc, eds. S.J. Leach, C.N. Page, Y. Peytoureau and M.N., 2424th ed. pp. 41-57. BSBI Conference Report, Sanford.
(2006) Survey of the bryophytes of arable land in Britain and Ireland 1: a classification of arable field assemblages. Journal of Bryology, 32, 61-79.
(2010) Aquatic plants in Britain and Ireland. , 365 pp.
(1997) The effect of disturbance on the bryophyte flora of Salisbury Plain, western Europe's largest chalk grassland. Journal of Bryology, 31, 255-266.
(2009) (2009)
New Atlas Of The British & Irish Flora. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
(2002) S.m.walters, 3rdrd ed. Botanical Society of the British Isles, London.
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A phylogenetically-informed trait-based analysis of range change in the vascular plant flora of Britain. Biodiversity and Conservation, 21, 171-185.
(2014) Hot, dry and different: Australian lizard richness is unlike that of mammals, amphibians and birds. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 19, 386-396.
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Can trait-based analyses of changes in species distribution be transferred to new geographic areas?. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 23, 1009-1018.
(2014) Towards a measure of functional connectivity: local synchrony matches small scale movements in a woodland edge butterfly. Landscape Ecology, 27, 1109-1120.
(2012) Measuring functional connectivity using long‐term monitoring data. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 2, 527-533.
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