Marsh Book of the Year Award

This award aims to recognise the contribution authors make to ecology.

Books can have a major impact in ecology, but academic book publishing brings relatively little financial reward to authors.

The Marsh Book of the Year Award acknowledges the important role that books have on ecology and its development. This prize is funded by the Marsh Christian Trust and is awarded to the book published in the last two years that has had the greatest influence on ecology or its application.

The prize is an honorarium of £1,000 and is open to books published anywhere in the world. We usually consider the Marsh Book of the Year Award on an annual basis.

The book is selected from those reviewed in The Niche over the previous two years.

Winners to date are:

Kimberly A. With: Essentials of Landscape Ecology (2020)
Trevor J.C. Beebee: Climate Change and British Wildlife (2019)
Andrew Clarke: Principles of Thermal Ecology: Temperature, Energy and Life (2018)
Tim Clutton-Brock: Mammal Societies (2017)

Jordi Bascompti & Pedro Jordano: Mutualistic Networks (2016)
Nigel Holmes and Paul Raven: Rivers (2015)
Ian Newton: Bird Populations (2014)
Brian Moss: Liberation ecology: the reconciliation of natural and human cultures (2013)
Roger L. H. Dennis: A Resource-Based Habitat View for Conservation: Butterflies in the British Landscape (2012)
David Briggs: Plant Microevolution and Conservation in Human-Influenced Ecosystems (2011)
Michael Angilleta: Thermal Adaptation: A Theoretical and Empirical Synthesis (2010)
Beverley Glover: Understanding Flowers and Flowering (2009)
David Wilkinson: Fundamental Processes in Ecology: An Earth System Approach (2007)
Richard Bardgett: The Biology of Soils – A Community and Ecosystem Approach (2006)
Peter M. Vitousek: Nutrient Cycling and Limitation: Hawai’i as a Model System (2005)