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Subscribers have full access to the archives (remember to log in). Click on the Table of Contents links below to browse the content of each issue. To purchase back issues, check the desired box and then hit the 'Submit Order' button at the bottom of the page. Back Issues are $8.00 each (price includes postage).

Browse by Year:   2008  |  2007  |  2006  |  2005  |  2004  |  2003  |  2002  |  2001  |  2000  

2008

January-March 2008 (Vol. 9, No. 1)

Urban Myths
Pull predators out of the mix, and a once lush green world turns into an ecological shop of horrors.
by William Stolzenburg

Ecosystems Unraveling
Pristine forests of the Amazon were not encountered in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; they were invented in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
by Fred Pearce

Cancer on a Whole Species
The gruesome disease ravaging Tasmanian devils is unlike anything we’ve seen before.
by Cynthia Mills



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2007

October-December (Vol. 8, No. 4)

Saint Ursus Maritimus
Icons are about simplicity and clarity. No gray areas. But what happens when the real polar bear clashes with the symbol it has become?
by Jim Robbins

Wildlife Contraception
Charged with downsizing wildlife populations to fit the geography of the modern world, a small group of researchers is out to replace bullets with family planning.
by Douglas Fox

The Vision Thing
Imagine swapping Tony Blair for Winston Churchill. Would it transform the timid politics of global warming?
by Ted Nordhaus & Michael Shellenberger

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July-September (Vol. 8, No. 3)

Arresting Evidence
IState-of-the-art forensic technology is forcing us to face the reality that even our most applauded trade bans and moratoriums aren’t working. From ivory cell phones to shark fin soup, it’s all available—at a price.
by Natasha Loder

The Last Gladiators
How joyful, really, is the resurrection of a species if the modern world cannot find a single haven for it and if it seems doomed to slip into limbo once more anyway?
by Scott Weidensaul

10 Solutions to Save the Ocean
We asked a select group of innovative thinkers to go out on a limb.
with Martín Hall, Daniel Pauly, David Conover, Amanda Vincent, Kimberly Davis, Carl Safina, George Sugihara, Ussif Rashid Sumaila, and Tundi Agardy

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April-June 2007 (Vol. 8, No. 2)

Aliens Among Us
Invasive species stand accused of ecological insubordination, mass murder, and other crimes against nature. But the case is far from closed.
A Round Table with James H. Brown and Dov F. Sax, Daniel Simberloff, and Mark Sagoff

That Sinking Feeling
We dig fossil fuel out of the ground, burn it and fill the atmosphere with carbon dioxide, and then plant trees to soak it back up. If only it were so simple.
by Nick Atkinson

Writer's Block
Earnest, pious, and quite allergic to irony: nature writing has none of the trademark qualities that play well in 2007. So is it time for a change?
by Jenny Price

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January-March 2007 (Vol. 8, No. 1)

Forward Thinkers
A biologist in Hollywood, an insect tracker, a pair of ecological architects, and the new leader of the world's largest conservation network. Here are a few people worth watching in 2007.
by Charles Alexander, Frances Cairncross, Eric Sorensen, and John Nielsen

Virginity Lost
Pristine forests of the Amazon were not encountered in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; they were invented in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
by Fred Pearce

When Worlds Collide
Climate change will shuffle the deck of plants, animals, and ecosystems in ways we've only begun to imagine.
by Douglas Fox

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2006

October-December 2006 (Vol. 7, No. 4)

Us or Them
Killing predators stands as one of the most age-old and enduring forms of wildlife management. Even now, myth and politics trump ecology. Is there a way out?
by William Stolzenburg

Second Chance
Cloning could be the Holy Grail of conservation or the ultimate folly. Either way, the fact is, cloning works.
by Cynthia Mills

Do No Harm
The story of the Hawaiian crow is a parable of doing harm by going to all lengths to do good. What role should the ancient advice of Hippocrates play in endangered species conservation?
by Mark Jerome Walters

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July-September 2006 (Vol. 7, No. 3)

Evolutionary Tinkering
A small group of latter-day Noahs is beginning to explore radical new ways to help species ride out the current wave of extinctions.
by Scott Norris

Dig Deeper
When context is lost, what kind of tales can biological relics tell? Paleoecologists are forcing us again and again to rethink what was once established fact.
by Douglas Fox

Fish Futures
George Sugihara thinks the way fish quotas are set is all wrong. Instead, he wants to tap into people's baser instincts by treating fish catches like tradable poker chips.
by Rex Dalton

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April-June 2006 (Vol. 7, No. 2)

Democratizing Taxonomy
Imagine a portable DNA barcode scanner that could transform people’s relationship with nature. Could such futuristic technology be to biodiversity what the printing press was to literacy?
by Marguerite Holloway

Environmental Heresies
Over the next ten years, the mainstream environmental movement will reverse its opinion and activism on population growth, urban-ization, genetically engineered organisms, and nuclear power.
An Interview with Stewart Brand

Get Real
Behind the hue and cry over the Kyoto climate change treaty is one nagging but rarely reported reality: even if every nation in the world complied to the hilt, it would hardly approach solving the problem.
by Katherine Ellison

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January-March 2006 (Vol. 7, No. 1)

Connecting Flights
Never mind the road map for peace. An unlikely marriage between bird conservation and military aviation is thriving on one of the most divisive pieces of real estate on Earth.
by Frances Cairncross

Bon Appétit
Ecologists are devising invasive species control strategies that would make Julia Child proud.
by Joe Roman

Where the Wild Things Were
The recent Nature paper proposing to bring cheetahs, lions, and elephants to North America raised a wild rumpus. But are the critics missing the point?
by William Stolzenburg

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2005
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October-December 2005 (Vol. 6, No. 4)

Oil Change
The interests of big businesses, environmentalists, and society coincide more often than you might guess from all the mutual blaming. So who needs to change?
by Jared Diamond

Four Futures
The seeds of the future are to be found in the extremes of the present. So our wildest ideas are the ones that give us insights into the surprises of the next few decades. by Erik Ness

The Look of Success
In the wake of successful wolf reintroductions, managers who once fervently defended wolves are now faced with killing them. Are we ready for modern predator management?
by Jim Robbins

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July-September 2005 (Vol. 6, No. 3)

Code Blue for Conservation
Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus say environmentalism’s heart has stopped. But making the movement more “progressive” may finish off the patient. Are there better prescriptions?
by Charles Alexander

The Protein Gap
John Fa is the first researcher to frame the bushmeat crisis as a protein crisis. And his analysis suggests that wildlife activists are behaving like Marie-Antoinette: “Let them eat cake.”
by Fred Pearce

Point of No Return
Evidence is mounting that fish populations won’t necessarily recover even if overfishing stops. Fishing may be such a powerful evolutionary force that we are running up a Darwinian debt for future generations.
by Natasha Loder

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April-June 2005 (Vol. 6, No. 2)

Are We Consuming Too Much?
The answer seems obvious. But it's not. Paul Ehrlich, Kenneth Arrow and nine other brilliant minds argue that we're worrying too much about how much we consume and too little about how to invest.
by Jon Christensen

Liquid Assets
The Sierra Gorda Biosphere Reserve in central Mexico is a water factory. Can an ambitious federal program convince water users to foot the bill for the hydrological services?
by Katherine Ellison & Amanda Hawn

Edge Walking on the Urban Fringe
In the face of inevitable development, Michael Klemens is making his stand for conservation where 10 million people dwell. One man's uncompelling is another man's biodiversity.
by Kevin Krajick

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January-March 2005 (Vol. 6, No. 1)

Born Again
William McDonough, a radical architect, dismisses traditional recycling as tired and inadequate. Instead, he's invented "industrial ecoystems" in which substances and machines are infinitely recycled.
by Jim Robbins

Pipe Dreams
If the twentieth century was the era of the megadam and the ecological destruction of the world's rivers, the twenty-first century could be different. It could. But will it?
by Fred Pearce

Healing Powers
With the finesse of modern market research, a team of undercover conservationists set out to probe the 3,000-year-old demand curve for endangered species in traditional Chinese medicines.
by Douglas Fox

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2004
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Fall 2004 (Vol. 5, No. 4)

Burned
Fire is the embodiment of uncertainty, and playing with it is just what Mama said.
by William deBuys

Tastes Like Chicken
Side-by-side taste tests offer clues to stem the bushmeat crisis in Gabon.
by Erik Ness

Living the Good Life
In Britain, conservation now counts as a measure of quality of life.
by Nancy Bazilchuk

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Summer 2004 (Vol. 5, No. 3)

The Father of All Mass Extinctions
There is a good possibility that losses in diversity in the present will surpass anything in the geological past. Facing that specter could shake the very tenets of conservation.
by Peter Ward

No Easy Way Out
Human health, wildlife disease, and conservation are inextricably linked. Yet modern medicine has fostered the profoundly dangerous illusion that we are above or apart from the natural world.
by Mark Jerome Walters

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Spring 2004 (Vol. 5, No. 2)

What Makes Environmental Treaties Work?
Given the way the environment ignores national boundaries, good global treaties are essential to saving it. Yet, it has become ever harder to create treaties that work. Instead of learning from history, we seem doggedly determined to repeat past failures.
by Frances Cairncross

Degraded Darkness
It's tempting to assume that artificial light distresses only a few exquisitely sensitive species. But mounting evidence suggests that disappearing darkness undermines our best conservation efforts.
by Ben Harder

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Winter 2004 (Vol. 5, No. 1)

Win-Win Illusions
Over the past two decades, efforts to heal the rift between poor people and protected srea have foundered. So what next?
by Jon Christensen

Reflections on the Pond
The pond is the universal icon for wetlands. But to Joy Zedler, ponds are the ecological equivalents of fast-food chains, an emblem of the homogenization of the contemporary landscape
by Sarah DeWeerdt

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2003
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Fall 2003 (Vol. 4, No. 4)

Virtual Ecosystems
Animated by a few simple yet baffling rules, virtual ecosystems growing in supercomputers bear an uncanny resemblance to real ones. The simulations challenge conventional wisdom about extinctions and invasions.
by W Wayt Gibbs

Renting Biodiversity: The Conservation Concessions Approach
With all the money we spend making conservation pay for itself, we could just pay for conservation
by Katherine Ellison

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Summer 2003 (Vol. 4, No. 3)

Auditing Conservation in an Age of Accountability
Instead of seeing conservation as just a good cause, people are starting to ask “What are your results?”
by Jon Christensen

Behavior and Conservation: More than Meets the Eye
For years, behavioral ecologists have meticuloustly studied the subtleties of wildlife behavior. Their findings reveal information that conservationists can use.
by Douglas Fox

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Spring 2003 (Vol. 4, No. 2)

Making Conservation Profitable
by Katherine Ellison and Gretchen C. Daily

The Conundrum of Biological Control Weighing Urgency against Uncertainty
by Jason Van Driesche and Roy Van Driesche

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Winter 2003 (Vol. 4, No. 1)

Conservation and Conflict
Until recently, we have thought of war as a humanitarian issue and addressed environmental damage only as a pert of post-conflict clean up. But it is clear that this approach will no longer suffice.

Rules of Engagement for Conservation
Lessons from the Democratic Republic of Congo
by John and Terese Hart

Top-Down Meets Bottom-Up
Conservation in a Post-Conflict World
by Peter Zahler

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2002
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Fall 2002 (Vol. 3, No. 4)

Thinking Like an Ocean
Ecological Lessons from Marine Bycatch
by Scott Norris with Martin Hall, Edward Melvin and Julia Parrish

Ground Truthing Conservation
Why Biological Exploration isn’t History by Alan Rabinowtz

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Summer 2002 (Vol. 3, No. 3)

Context Matters
Considerations for Large-Scale Conservation
by Reed Noss

Old Science. New Science

Incorporating Traditional Ecological Knowledge into Contemporary Management
by Chuck Striplen and Sarah DeWeerdt

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Spring 2002 (Vol. 3, No. 2)

Informed Decisions
Conservation Corridors and the Spread of Infectious Disease
by Leslie Bienen

Agriculture versus Biodiversity
Will Market Solutions Suffice?
by Richard Manning

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Winter 2002 (Vol. 3, No. 1)

What Really is an Evolutionarily Significant Unit?
The debate over integrating genetics and ecology in conservation biology
by Sarah DeWeerdt

The Fallacy of Passive Management
Managing for firesafe forest reserves
by James K. Agee

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2001
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Fall 2001 (Vol. 2, No. 4)

Rethinking Insects
What would an ecosystem approach look like? by Timothy D. Schowalter, with Jay Withgott

Turning the Ship Around
Changing the policies and culture of a government agency to make ecosystem management work
by Jennifer M. Belcher

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Summer 2001 (Vol. 2, No. 3)

Designing Marine Reserve Networks
Why Small, Isolated Protected Areas Are Not Enough
by Callum M. Roberts, Benjamin Halpern, Stephen R Palumbi, and Robert R. Warner

Stone-Age Minds at Work on 21st Century Science
How Cognitive Psychology Can Inform Conservation Biology
by Judith L. Anderson

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Spring 2001 (Vol. 2, No. 2)

Safe Harbor Agreements
Carving Out A New Role for NGOs
by Michael J. Bean, J. Peter Jenny, and Brian van Eerden

Selecting Effective Umbrella Species

by Erica Fleishman, Dennis D. Murphy, and Ronald P Neilson

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Winter 2001 (Vol. 2, No. 1)

Guilty until proven innocent
Preventing nonnative species invasions
by Jason Van Driesche and Roy Van Driesche

Nectar Trails of Migratory Pollinators

Restoring corridors on Private Lands
by Gary Paul Nabhan

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2000
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Winter 2000 (Vol. 1, No. 1)

Threads of Continuity
Ecological disturbance, recovery, and the theory of biological legacies
by Jerry F. Franklin and others

Making Collaboration Work
Lessons from a comprehensive assessment of over 200 wide-ranging cases of collaboration in environmental management
by Steven L. Yaffee and Julia M. Woodolleck

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