Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An early vehicle for conservationism, [2] Forest and Stream was dedicated to wildlife conservation, helped to launch the National Audubon Society, was an early sponsor the national park movement, and supported the U.S.-Canadian Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918.
[10] [7] Losey wrote two books. Let Them Be Remembered: The Story of the Fur Trade Forts, the story of the Hudson's Bay Company and the 1600 fur trade, was published in 1999. [11] Her second, Seney National Wildlife Refuge: its story, was published in 2003. [12] She remained a volunteer at Seney National Wildlife Refuge until her death in 2005. [3]
When designing a wildlife monitoring strategy, it is important to minimize harm to the animal and implement the 3Rs principles (Replacement, Reduction, Refinement). [55] In wildlife research, this can be done through the use of non-invasive methods, sharing samples and data with other research groups, or optimizing traps to prevent injuries ...
John Burroughs. John Burroughs (April 3, 1837 – March 29, 1921) was an American naturalist and nature essayist, active in the conservation movement in the United States. [1] ...
Resource conservation: ISBN 0-670-29717-8: Enviro-Capitalists: Doing Good While Doing Well: Terry Lee Anderson and Donald R. Leal: 1997: Free-market environmentalism: ISBN 978-0-8476-8382-6: Environmental Principles and Policies: An Interdisciplinary Introduction: Sharon Beder: 2006: Various themes: ISBN 978-1-84407-404-4: An Essay on the ...
In his 1933 book Game Management, Leopold defined the science of wildlife management as "the art of making land produce sustained annual crops of wild game for recreational use." But, as Curt Meine [ 19 ] has pointed out, he also considered it to be a technique for restoring and maintaining diversity in the environment.
The Mannahatta Project is a Wildlife Conservation Society research project in historical ecology led by landscape ecologist Eric W. Sanderson [1] that principally ran for 10 years from 1999-2009, reconstructing the island at the point of first contact between the Dutch ship Halve Maen and the Lenape in 1609.
Mowat's next book, the children's book Lost in the Barrens (1956), won a Governor General's Award. [2] [27] In 1963, Mowat wrote a possibly fictionalised account of his experiences in the Canadian Arctic with Arctic wolves entitled Never Cry Wolf (1963). [4] In 1985, Mowat started a book tour of the United States to promote Sea of Slaughter.