The River Cottage Edible Seashore Handbook

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

John Wright (2009).  Bloomsbury, London.  240pp Hardback

ISBN 978-0-7475-9531-1

Review source

Reviewed by Jan Light in 2010.
Originally published in Mollusc World Issue 22.

In these times of increasing providence when it comes to resourceful strategies to provide one's own food, the publication of Edible 

Atlas of the land and freshwater molluscs of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

Stella M. Turk, Hazel M. Meredith and Geraldine A. Holyoak. ERCCIS Publication No. 1, Environmental Records Centre for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly, 2001. 136pp. ISBN 1-902864-01-8.

Review source

Originally reviewed by Ian Killeen in 2002.
Published in Journal of Conchology (2002), Vol.37

Cornwall has been in the forefront of biological recording in the UK with the develop- ment of computerised databases long before the establishment of biological records centres in other counties. This non-marine mollusc atlas represents the first in a new series of publications and comprises a synthesis of all mollusc records to the end of 1999. This well-presented, softback A4 book has a glossy green cover with a photograph of a living Ashfordia granulata, six pages of introductory text, and a page each for the 122 species recorded from Cornwall.

Eocene Mollusca from the vicinity of McCulloch's Bridge, Waihao River, South Canterbury, New Zealand: Palaeoecology and systematic.

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

Phillip A. Maxwell. New Zealand Geological Survey Paleontological Bulletin 65, 288 pp, 30 plates. ISSN 0114-2283. 1992.

Review source

Originally reviewed by D.C. Long in 1992.
Published in Journal of Conchology (1992), Vol.34

This is another thorough study by Phillip Maxwell of a New Zealand Tertiary fauna. It is based on his Ph.D. dissertation and it is a loss to New Zealand palaeontology that Phillip was made redundant before this work was published. The scope of the monograph is the 250 species of Mollusca from the Middle to Late Eocene Waihao Greensand and Ashley Mudstone exposed in the Waihao River, on South Island. Nine new genus group taxa are proposed for gastropods and 89 new species of Mollusca are very adequately described.

Non-Marine Mollusca

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

Smith, B.J. (1992). In: Houston, W.W.K. (ed) Zoological Catalogue of Australia. Canberra: AGPS Vol 8, xii 405 pp. ISBN 0 644 14598 6

Review source

Originally reviewed by D.C. Long in 1992.
Published in Journal of Conchology (1992), Vol.34

This formatted catalogue by Dr. Brian Smith is a major summation (and the first since Iredales's 1930s lists) of the state of knowledge of Australia's non-marine mollusc fauna. It is essentially a print out of a concise computer data base which gives the current (to 31 December 1990) state of taxonomic and biological knowledge of the Australian fauna - in this case Bivalvia, Gastropoda: Prosobranchia and Gastropoda: Pulmonata including the introductions.

Terrestrial Slugs. Biology, Ecology and Control

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

A. South. Chapman & Hall, London. ISBN 0 412 368102. 428 pages.

Review source

Originally reviewed by F. Naggs in 1992.
Published in Journal of Conchology (1992), Vol.34

South's stated objective: 'to present a review of current knowledge of the biology and ecology of slugs, together with their status and control as pests' is achieved by a thorough and scholarly work of a high standard. A summary of slug groups, with particular reference to the British fauna, is followed by detailed reviews of anatomy, physiology, reproduction, behaviour, life cycles and ecology. Additional topics surveyed include predation, parasites and disease, slugs as pests and their control. Appendices cover methods of culture, the anaesthetising, narcotising and preserving of slugs.

The Land and Freshwater Molluscs of Suffolk: an Atlas and History

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

I. J. Killeen. 171 pp, 35 colour plates. ISBN 0-9508154-4-6, 1992. Published by The Suffolk Naturalists' Society, c/o The Museum, High Street, Ipswich, Suffolk, IP1 3QH.

Review source

Originally reviewed by B. Coles in 1992.
Published in Journal of Conchology (1992), Vol.34

Those of you who have been involved in faunal census surveys will know the effort required to maintain enthusiasm to complete such schemes. It is, therefore, particularly pleasing to see lan Killeen's study of the land and freshwater molluscs of Suffolk appear in print. Moreover, this book, which represents over ten years work on the molluscan fauna of Suffolk, principally by the author, has been produced to the high standard which it deserves.

British Red Data Books: 3 Invertebrates Other Than Insects

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

Edited by J. H. Bratton. Joint Nature Conservation Committee 1991 ISBN 1 873701 00 4

Review source

Originally reviewed by M.J.Willing in 1992.
Published in Journal of Conchology (1992), Vol.34

This compact 253 page book, which is produced in A5 format, continues from two earlier Red Data Books. The first of these, now in the second edition, dealt with vascular plants and this was followed in 1987 by a volume dealing with British insects.

Checklist of British Marine Mollusca

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

Shelagh M. Smith and David Heppell. National Museums of Scotland Information Series No. 11, published in 1991. ISSN 0952-7737. 114 pp.

Review source

Originally reviewed by D.R. Seaward in 1992. Published in Journal of Conchology (1992), Vol.34

At last we have an up-to-date taxonomy for the British marine mollusc fauna - and for most of north west Europe too.

A Classification of the Living Mollusca assembled by Kay Cunningham Vaught

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

xii + 189 pp., 1989. edited by R. Tucker Abbott and Kenneth J. Boss, American Malacologists, P.O. Box 1192, Burlington, MA 01803.

Review source

Originally reviewed by Walter Sage in 1989.
Published in Journal of Conchology (1989), Vol.33

Now, after several years of careful searching the reams of molluscan literature, Kay Vaught has presented us with a 'state of the art' compilation of supraspedfic names in the Mollusca. The author has done the best job possible by providing a systematic listing of family and generic names, with the details of classification corroborated by the top specialists in particular groups of mollusks.

Late Miocene Deep-Water Mollusca from the Stillwater Mudstone at Greymouth, Westland, New Zealand: Paleoecology and Systematics

Submitted by Steve Wilkinson on
Reference

P. A. Maxwell. New Zealand Geological Survey Palacontological Bulletin 55, 1988.

Review source

Originally reviewed by Walter Sage in 1989.
Published in Journal of Conchology (1989), Vol.33

This Bulletin is concerned with the molluscan faunules found at two localities about a kilometre apart on the north- west coast of South Island, New Zealand. It is of interest firstly because there have been relatively few studies of Neogene deep-water mollusc faunas and, secondly, for the taxonomic conclusions given, or foreshadowed, in it.