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Lin Baldock is a biologist, a fully qualified commercial diver and an environmental consultant who has also worked as an academic researcher. Frances Dipper is a writer, lecturer and independent marine consultant who runs marine fish identification courses for marine consultancies and for Seasearch.
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"A perfect companion for any diver or snorkeler."—Nick and Caroline Robertson-Brown, Scubaverse
"Attractively produced and printed on matt paper with usefully designedcover-flaps, this should be a book to treasure – even when, further down the line, it is reduced to a dog-eared existence in the club-van’s glovebox."—Steve Weinman, DiverNet
"This book makes a significant advance in supporting the identification of fish in the UK by ail those who relish, or indeed depend on, accurate recording. . . . The authors and Seasearch are to be congratulated. The quality of these publications improves with every release."—Clare Peddie, Porcupine Marine Natural History Society
"[Inshore Fishes of Britain and Ireland] is a first rate guide, well-conceived, well-produced and filled with information. It will be a joy for snorkellers, divers and keen naturalists."—David M. Gascoigne, Travels With Birds
"[A] fascinating field guide. . . . [Inshore Fishes of Britain and Ireland] is an excellent sourcebook with a great many of the latest firsthand materials. Information provided by this book, along with the data uploaded by the volunteer divers supported by the Seasearch project, will contribute significantly to the studies on marine life and marine ecosystems in British and Irish waters."—Kunyan Zheng, H-Net Reviews
"A book with so much to say, but told in a wonderfully concise manner, not a word on the page is wasted; with plenty of useful keys, gorgeous photographs of fishes in their respective biotopes, and is one of only a handful of books recognising broad single species cariations through an indentification context."—Josh Pickett, Sea Angler Magazine
No known hazards or warnings
Accessibility Features
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Inaccessible, or known limited accessibility
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EAA exception 2 – Disproportionate burden
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No known hazards or warnings