Hcn.org news in brief.
Southwest rain, Endangered Species Act, school-to-prison pipeline and more.
Shallow understanding
Reader Brandt Mannchen takes issue with rainwater harvesting as presented in a recent article (“Letters,” HCN, 5/25/15; “Tucson’s rain-catching revolution” HCN, 4/27/15)). He deplores local Tucson water expert Brent Cluff’s belief that “water harvesting could support unlimited growth.” I know of Brent Cluff but have never heard of and certainly do not share this opinion. […]
Remembering ‘the creek’
“The Wetland Wars” struck a chord with me. I went to Loyola Marymount University from 1960 to 1963. The campus was above and just to the east of Ballona Creek. In that era, it was known as “the creek.” After a long day, I often walked around the area to capture some of the tranquility […]
New perspective from Edward Abbey on the river
Review of ‘The Hidden Canyon: A River Journey’ by John Blaustein
Senate approves major reform of the chemical safety law
The biggest bipartisan environmental legislation to pass the Senate in decades.
Lust for fungi
A writer has a holy experience while mushroom hunting in southern Oregon.
Latest: Toxic fumes inhalation added to list of oil & gas worker dangers
Center for Disease Control investigates recent deaths.
Latest: New air quality regulation for oil and gas operators
Wyoming will require companies to retrofit equipment
High-flyin’ hypocrisy
In her May 11 “Writers on the Range,” Kathleen Dean Moore laments the view of the North Dakota oilfields at night from her jetliner window at 31,000 feet. And, admittedly, vistas with drilling rigs, pumpjacks and gas flares leave something to be desired, compared with vast sweeps of virgin prairie. The excellent article on Theodore […]
Heart cracked wide open
Review of ‘Tom Connor’s Gift’ by David Allan Cates.
Grave dangers and satisfying ends
Review of ‘Crow Fair’ by Thomas McGuane.
Genetic research lays foundation for bold conservation strategies
To save the greatest number of species, should we focus on the most common?
Citizen pseudoscience
Wyoming Sen. Mike Enzi’s legislation to mandate use of local, county, state and tribal data in Endangered Species Act decisions (“Sagebrush bureaucracy,” HCN, 5/11/15) sounds like a reasonable idea, citizen science at its very grassroots. The more information that’s included, the better the decision, right? The devil, of course, is in the details. I have […]
Western cities ranked by most polluted air
Los Angeles and Fresno are worst, Prescott and Bellingham best.
Can leasing irrigation water keep Colorado farms alive?
Farmers try to stop “buy and dry” by pooling water rights to supply growing cities.
Big cat cruelty in Utah and the first recorded California condor in New Mexico
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
A bull trout reintroduction in Oregon proves what’s possible
The ambitious effort brings a threatened predator back to the Clackamas watershed.
Focusing in on arthropods of the West
Up-close portraits of jumping spiders, beetles, Mormon crickets and other creepy-crawlies essential to our ecosystems.
Scarcity and survival reign in ‘The Water Knife’
A conversation with Paolo Bacigalupi about climate fiction, the power of water and his new novel.
