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A publication of the Society for Conservation Biology |
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Table of Contents FEATURES CONSERVATION AND CONFLICT Print Only Until recently, we have thought of war as a humanitarian issue and addressed environmental damage only as part of post-conflict clean up. But, it is clear that this approach will no longer suffice. RULES OF ENGAGEMENT FOR CONSERVATION Cover Story Lessons from the Democratic Republic of Congo by John and Terese Hart TOP-DOWN MEETS BOTTOM-UP: CONSERVATION IN A POST-CONFLICT WORLD The post-conflict situation in Afghanistan has created an extraordinary opportunity for conservation — the enormous obstacles can be offset by the enormous possibilities when a country essentially is reborn. By Peter Zahler TOOLS & TECHNIQUES GIS-BASED CONSERVATION PLANNING A Powerful Tool to be Used with Caution by David Stokes and Peter Morrison NUMBERS IN CONTEXT WHEN IS ERADICATION A SOUND INVESTMENT? Print Only Strategically Responding to Invasive Alien Species by Jefferey A. McNeely, Laurie E. Neville, and Marcel Rejmanek CASE STUDY USING EXOTICS AS A TEMPORARY HABITAT An Accidental Experiment on Rodrigues Island by Douglas Fox ESSAYS THE BIG GREEN BLUR BETWEEN THE LOBBY AND THE CAB Print Only by Anne Matthews JOURNAL WATCH Connections May Be Key to Surviving Fragmentation Getting the Most out of Rivers Hatchery Salmon May Endanger Wild Cousins Nonnative Earthworms May Be Wiping Out Rare Plants Pesticides Linked to Amphibian Declines The Pitfalls of Doing What Comes Naturally Too Many Turtles May End Up as Roadkill BOOKS BOOK REVIEWS FROM READERS YOUR LETTERS AND COMMENTS |
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