Wisconsin Natural Resources

Wisconsin Natural Resources
Title Wisconsin Natural Resources PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 500
Release 2013
Genre Conservation of natural resources
ISBN

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Report of the Disastrous Effects of the Destruction of Forest Trees Now Going on So Rapidly in the State of Wisconsin

Report of the Disastrous Effects of the Destruction of Forest Trees Now Going on So Rapidly in the State of Wisconsin
Title Report of the Disastrous Effects of the Destruction of Forest Trees Now Going on So Rapidly in the State of Wisconsin PDF eBook
Author Increase Allen Lapham
Publisher
Pages 112
Release 1867
Genre Trees
ISBN

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Renewing the Countryside

Renewing the Countryside
Title Renewing the Countryside PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 186
Release 2007
Genre Conservation of natural resources
ISBN

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Resource added for the Farm Business and Production Management program 300901.

A Sand County Almanac

A Sand County Almanac
Title A Sand County Almanac PDF eBook
Author Aldo Leopold
Publisher Oxford University Press, USA
Pages 241
Release 2020-05
Genre Nature
ISBN 0197500269

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First published in 1949 and praised in The New York Times Book Review as "full of beauty and vigor and bite," A Sand County Almanac combines some of the finest nature writing since Thoreau with a call for changing our understanding of land management.

Conservation Directory

Conservation Directory
Title Conservation Directory PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 806
Release 1976
Genre Conservation of natural resources
ISBN

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The Vanishing Present

The Vanishing Present
Title The Vanishing Present PDF eBook
Author Donald M. Waller
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Pages 530
Release 2009-08-01
Genre Nature
ISBN 0226871746

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Straddling temperate forests and grassland biomes and stretching along the coastline of two Great Lakes, Wisconsin contains tallgrass prairie and oak savanna, broadleaf and coniferous forests, wetlands, natural lakes, and rivers. But, like the rest of the world, the Badger State has been transformed by urbanization and sprawl, population growth, and land-use change. For decades, industry and environment have attempted to coexist in Wisconsin—and the dynamic tensions between economic progress and environmental protection makes the state a fascinating microcosm for studying global environmental change. The Vanishing Present brings together a distinguished set of contributors—including scientists, naturalists, and policy experts—to examine how human pressures on Wisconsin’s changing lands, waters, and wildlife have redefined the state’s ecology. Though they focus on just one state, the authors draw conclusions about changes in temperate habitats that can be applied elsewhere, and offer useful insights into future of the ecology, conservation, and sustainability of Wisconsin and beyond. A fitting tribute to the home state of Aldo Leopold and John Muir, The Vanishing Present is an accessible and timely case study of a significant ecosystem and its response to environmental change.

Banning DDT

Banning DDT
Title Banning DDT PDF eBook
Author Bill Berry
Publisher Wisconsin Historical Society
Pages 279
Release 2014-04-15
Genre Nature
ISBN 0870206451

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On a December day in 1968, DDT went on trial in Madison, Wisconsin. In Banning DDT: How Citizen Activists in Wisconsin Led the Way, Bill Berry details how the citizens, scientists, reporters, and traditional conservationists drew attention to the harmful effects of “the miracle pesticide” DDT, which was being used to control Dutch elm disease. Berry tells of the hunters and fishers, bird-watchers, and garden-club ladies like Lorrie Otto, who dropped off twenty-eight dead robins at the Bayside village offices. He tells of university professors and scientists like Joseph Hickey, a professor and researcher in the Department of Wildlife Management in at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, who, years after the fact, wept about the suppression of some of his early DDT research. And he tells of activists like Senator Gaylord Nelson and members of the state’s Citizens Natural Resources who rallied the cause. The Madison trial was one of the first for the Environmental Defense Fund. The National Audubon Society helped secure the more than $52,000 in donations that offset the environmentalists’ costs associated with the hearing. Today, virtually every reference to the history of DDT mentions the impact of Wisconsin’s battles. The six-month-long DDT hearing was one of the first chapters in citizen activism in the modern environmental era. Banning DDT is a compelling story of how citizen activism, science, and law merged in Wisconsin’s DDT battles to forge a new way to accomplish public policy. These citizen activists were motivated by the belief that we all deserve a voice on the health of the land and water that sustain us.