Posted inSeptember 5, 2011: For the love of hummers

Citizen scientists gather data on wildlife

The wildlife species about which we have little or no information far outnumber those that are thoroughly studied and documented. Basic population trends are missing for even some of the best-known species, such as the Mexican spotted owl and the northern leopard frog. Better coordination between state and federal agencies could ensure that researchers collect […]

Posted inSeptember 5, 2011: For the love of hummers

HCN stories win awards

Our May 17, 2010, feature “Accidental Wilderness” by David Wolman just received recognition in the Society of Environmental Journalists 2010-2011 Awards for Reporting on the Environment. The story took third place in the category “Kevin Carmody Award for Outstanding In-depth Reporting, Small Market.” And in the 2011 Excellence in Journalism Awards from the Native American […]

Posted inSeptember 5, 2011: For the love of hummers

Flight risks: Cities reduce hazards for migrating birds

What do you picture when you think about migratory birds? Chattering snow geese dropping in a feathery cloud to the surface of a reservoir? Or a sunlit marsh filled with amorous sandhill cranes, twirling and prancing for prospective mates? What you probably don’t envision is a metal-and-glass metropolis teeming with cars, people and pets. But […]

Posted inSeptember 5, 2011: For the love of hummers

EPA aims to clean up polluted air in Western gas fields

In gas patches East to West, tales of tainted water wells have garnered widespread media attention, putting hydraulic fracturing — broadly credited for the natural gas industry’s meteoric expansion of late — at the center of one of the country’s hottest environmental fights. But despite reams of circumstantial evidence, incontrovertible proof that fracking itself — […]

Posted inRange

This is your brain on climate change

 By Anne Fahey, Sightline.org Remember those old anti-drug television commercials with an egg sizzling in a frying pan? Here’s a new twist: This is your brain. This is your brain on climate change. I’ve written before that with or without multimillion dollar campaigns to discredit climate science (and scientists), our brains don’t seem very well equipped to fathom the scope […]

Posted inGoat

Friday News Roundup: Of Fuel and Frogs

TransCanada’s proposed Keystone XL pipeline — the world’s largest — has dominated the news this past week. Last Friday, the State Department issued a final Environmental Impact Statement for the pipeline — which would run oil from the Alberta tar sands to Gulf Coast refineries — that concluded the project would not significantly impact the […]

Posted inRange

Beware of wolves cloaked in “access”

America’s national forests and our fish and wildlife belong to everyone. Americans rightfully demand access to this national birthright. Access is like oxygen for hunters and anglers. But beware. Industry barracudas are trying to hoodwink sportsmen into supporting bad legislation by promising “access.” Take HR 1581, the Wilderness and Roadless Release Act. It’s sponsored by […]

Posted inGoat

Illegal trailblazing as negotiation tool?

If you build it, the federal land agencies will include it. That’s what Montana mountain biking enthusiast Ron Cron counted on when he embarked on a three-day, illegal trail-making frenzy in the Flathead National Forest in May 2009, complete with  jumps and other technical features. Illegal trail building is ubiquitous on Western public lands, plaguing […]

Posted inGoat

Speculating on solar

When the Bureau of Land Management’s Southern Nevada office sent out a letter last week rejecting Goldman Sachs’ applications to develop renewable energy on public land, you had to wonder: What was an investment bank doing in the Nevada desert? And you wouldn’t be the only one asking. The Associated Press reporter who broke the […]

Posted inAugust 22, 2011: Looking for Balance in Navajoland

Toads on high: tracking and photographing boreal toads

On a warm July morning, two biologists and three volunteers scramble up an alpine valley on the Williams Fork of the Colorado River, high in the Colorado Rockies. Their boots, scrubbed with disinfectant at 6 a.m., have become mud-sicles squelching through sucking, oily-sheened bogs. Hordes of mosquitoes pursue with zen-like focus. It’s not exactly Club […]

Posted inRange

Why rural education is failing

By Zach Wilson, The Daily Yonder The greatest challenge in rural education is the utter disregard for place.  State and national governments pursue economic growth at the cost of communities, and such disregard is reflected in the way the state approaches public schooling. One of the most ugly and expedient trends in education is the […]

Posted inGoat

A bear of a season

The developed Yellowstone campground where John Wallace set up his tent last Wednesday probably made the national park seem relatively innocuous to the 59-year-old Michigan resident. It’s peak season, after all, and the place was likely humming with human activity, cars, chatter — those signs of weird, woodsy civilization peculiar to the West’s iconic natural […]

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