Posted inJanuary 11, 2010: Breakdown

Urban oilscape

One of the West’s most car-happy places sprawls across some of its oldest and most productive oilfields. About 28 million barrels are pumped annually from 5,000 wells in the Los Angeles Basin and just offshore, according to the Center for Land Use Interpretation. These photos were drawn from the organization’s recent L.A. exhibit, “Urban Crude.” […]

Posted inJanuary 11, 2010: Breakdown

Thanks for the memories

As one of the original members of the Mexican Wolf Coalition, I read with amusement Kieran Suckling’s self-serving statements about the circumstances leading up to the Mexican gray wolf being released back into the wild (HCN, 12/21/09 & 1/4/10). I have a different recollection. Indeed, some members of the Mexican Wolf Coalition were more cautious […]

Posted inJanuary 11, 2010: Breakdown

Solidarity, not suits

After reading the recent interview with Kieran Suckling, it occurs to me the one reason we’re having so much trouble advancing meaningful conservation opportunities is we’re spending too much time, energy and money fighting each other (HCN, 12/21/09 & 1/4/10). The litigation and lawsuits advanced by the Center for Biological Diversity are having the exact […]

Posted inGoat

Water Bargain

It’s one more step in what’s been a long, slow trudge. But this step’s a big one. Last Thursday, negotiators released a final agreement on water rights in the Klamath River, moving closer to a settlement of the long-running water wars in the Klamath Basin. The Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement sets the terms for divvying […]

Posted inGoat

The Bighorn-Butterfly Effect

Little wings can compel broad change, but it certainly doesn’t hurt when they are backed up by the possibility of a head-butt, litigious or otherwise. The presence of endangered Quino checkerspot butterflies and Peninsular bighorn sheep  on 51,000 acres of the San Jacinto Mountains–and the appeals of several prominent conservation groups–has prompted the U.S. Forest […]

Posted inWotr

PRO: Sen. Tester’s Montana bill is a true collaborative effort

When Montana Democratic Sen. Jon Tester introduced his Forest Jobs and Recreation Act last July, he did something that is all too uncommon in today’s political world. He kept a promise. He’d told conservationists, loggers and recreationists that if they could reach agreement on contentious issues involving public lands — including wilderness designation, deciding where […]

Posted inGoat

Unobtainium

In Avatar, there’s an economic reason, of course, that humans have traveled to Pandora. Early on in the movie, we’re shown the temptation: a sample of the element levitates in midair, silver, alluring—and apparently worth $20 million a kilogram. Considering the production expenses for Avatar were an estimated $230 million, it would take only 12 […]

Posted inGoat

Protection for jaguar spots

The mysterious jaguar, which ranges across Central and South America, has only been recorded in the southwestern U.S. a handful of times. The last known cat on this side of the border died last spring after being trapped. But jaguars once ranged from Louisiana to California, and could again, say conservationists — if only their […]

Posted inRange

Venison a la plomb

Deer hunting season is over in the West. And if you were a good aim, your freezer is chock full of venison — looking a lot like the meat section at Costco. But be warned, new research suggests that eating game shot with lead bullets may expose you and your family to lead, a poisonous […]

Gift this article