Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Arizona state land opens for conservation

Arizona environmentalists now have a chance to lease state lands for conservation purposes. As signed by Gov. Fife Symington, the Arizona Preserve Initiative allows conservation groups to lease state lands, estimated at 30,000 acres, within a three-mile radius of all major cities. An earlier bill from Symington proposed to open up over 700,000 acres of […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Runaway runway advances at Jackson Hole airport

Despite overwhelming public opposition, Jackson Hole airport officials have decided to push the high-altitude airport’s runway deeper into Grand Teton National park. Airport board members characterized the decision to add 968 feet of pavement to the 6,300-foot-long runway as a compromise. “I’m looking at what is doable,” said airport board member Fred Hibberd. An earlier […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Biodiversity Protection: Implementation and Reform of the Endangered Species Act

Biological diversity and the Endangered Species Act are hot topics and the themes of the University of Colorado School of Law’s 17th Annual Summer Conference, Biodiversity Protection: Implementation and Reform of the Endangered Species Act, June 9-12, in Boulder, Colo. For more information, contact Katherine Taylor, Natural Resources Law Center, Campus Box 401, Boulder, CO […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Rocky Mountain Rendezvous: Renew Yourself in the High Country

Conservationists from around the world will gather in Keystone, Colo., July 7-10, to discuss ecosystem management. The 51st annual conference of the Soil and Water Conservation Society, Rocky Mountain Rendezvous: Renew Yourself in the High Country, features speakers Wainwright Verlarde of the Jicarilla Apache Tribe and Forest Service Chief Jack Ward Thomas. Contact Nancy Herselius […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Wildflowers made easy

WILDFLOWERS MADE EASY If you’ve ever struggled to differentiate between pinnate and palmate vennation or corymb and cyme inflorescence, you’ll be happy to hear there’s a new wildflower guide for botanical novices. Written by G.K. Guennel, a spore and pollen expert, the two-volume Guide to Colorado Wildflowers is remarkably easy to use and includes some […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

A Colorado canyon faces an uncertain future

Demaree Canyon, a steep-walled sagebrush and pinon-pine expanse in the Bookcliffs area outside Grand Junction, Colo., could become part of the national wilderness system. Or the wilderness study area might be transformed this summer into a series of natural-gas drilling pads. The small canyon’s fate could set a precedent for how much development can be […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Colorado Democrats ponder electability vs. purity

Tom Strickland and Gene Nichol are two 40-something former Texans who have used their law degrees to help the Sierra Club. They live 35 miles apart on Colorado’s Front Range, and they’re applying for the same job – Democratic replacement for retiring Republican Sen. Hank Brown. Most similarities end there. Strickland is a partner with […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Imagine a West without heroes

Heroes have always come with the West. When Indians blocked homesteaders, the cavalry came. When cattle barons closed the open range, President Cleveland reopened it with the Unlawful Enclosures Act of 1885. When aridity slowed settlement, the Bureau of Reclamation built dams. When Western forests succumbed to flames and cutting, Gifford Pinchot’s Forest Service pledged […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

It’s Chase who’s lost in the dark wood

In a Dark Wood: The Fight Over Forests and the Rising Tyranny of Ecology, by Alston Chase, Houghton Mifflin, $29.95. Review by Alan Pistorius Alston Chase’s new book sets out to chronicle the continuing fight between the timber industry and environmentalists over old-growth forest in the Pacific Northwest and to determine why, in his view, […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

There’s plenty of money to study Utah’s game

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion Officials in Utah’s Division of Wildlife Resources barely had time to note the news that Dick Carter was mothballing his Utah Wilderness Association before the perennial thorn in their sides was back demanding action on another issue. Carter spent […]

Posted inMay 27, 1996: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion

Frogs: The ultimate indicator species

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story: Utah ushers its frogs toward oblivion Native frog populations are plummeting all over the world. No one knows exactly why, but there are six prominent possibilities. Destruction of wetlands is one, contamination of water supplies by biocides, pollutants, and acid rain another. A third is […]

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