Flora & Fauna
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Letters
Gratuitous hand-wringing
by Michelle Leicester, Jan 21, 2013 -
Writers on the Range
Admitting ignorance can be a good thing
Our rapid resource development has led to mass extinctions. Why don't we slow down?
by Pat Wray, Jan 15, 2013 -
Writers on the Range
Dead whales do tell tales
Our problems disposing of a beached whale point to how basic ecological links are broken.
by Tim Lydon, Jan 11, 2013 -
Writers on the Range
There are too many unwanted backyard horses
The tale of the neglected domestic horse is a tragic one.
by David Feela, Jan 04, 2013 -
Letters
Techno-eco-literacy
by Erica Goad , Dec 24, 2012 -
Current
Turning dead deer into good soil
A pilot program in Oregon transforms roadkill into compost.
by Eliza Murphy, Dec 19, 2012 -
Feature
As it goes high-tech, wildlife biology loses its soul
We're learning a lot by monitoring wild animals, but the high tech methods used to track them take some of the mystery out of our relationship with the wild.
by Jim Robbins, Dec 17, 2012 -
Sidebar
The environmentalists' whitebark pine air force
by Ray Ring, Dec 11, 2012 -
Letters
BLM's equine quagmire
by Joe Ross, Dec 10, 2012 -
Editor's Note
A bird in hand
Will the soul of wildlife biology survive in an era of remote monitoring technology?
by Ray Ring, Dec 10, 2012 -
Sidebar
A sampler of wildlife tech
The gadgets we attach to wild animals and fish include radio transmitters, microchips, acoustic tags, geolocators and accelerometers.
by Ray Ring, Dec 10, 2012 -
Letters
What's wild?
by Marilyn Colyer, Dec 10, 2012 -
Letters
Round 'em up
by Gene Byrne, Dec 10, 2012 -
Essays
The right tributary
A writer gets roped into fish surveys for endangered bull trout.
by Ana Maria Spagna, Dec 07, 2012 -
Writers on the Range
Salmon must have water in the Klamath and Trinity rivers
Fish, not dams, deserve priority.
by Leonard Masten, Dec 04, 2012






