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A publication of the Society for Conservation Biology |
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Table of Contents FROM THE EDITORS EVOLUTION Two changes of note in this issue. FEATURES 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 Cover Story Climate change will shuffle the deck of plants, animals, and ecosystems in ways we've only begun to imagine. by Douglas Fox INNOVATIONS WILDLIFE FLIGHT RECORDER An on-board computer revolutionizes the study of animal behavior. by Eric Sorensen PERSONAL CARBON ACCOUNTS British scheme would cap an individual's carbon pollution. by Nick Atkinson LAST WISHES Green cemeteries fund conservation. by Nancy Bazilchuk CHORAL REEFS An inexpensive device monitors ocean health through sound. by Nancy Bazilchuk NUMBERS IN CONTEXT ARE WE PUTTING TIGERS IN OUR TANKS? The connection between biodiesel, land use, and habitat loss isn't easy to pin down, but it isn't easy to ignore, either. ESSAYS STRANGERS IN OUR OWN LAND Print Only by David Ehrenfeld JOURNAL WATCH A Little Vaccination Goes a Long Way Hotspot Mismatch for Most-Imperiled Species Honey Bees Get a Bump from Wild Brethren Small Worlds Shed New Light on Habitat Loss Showy Males Most Vulnerable to Warming Tropics Are the Cradle of Biodiversity Salmon Farms Create Deadly Clouds of Sea Lice BOOKS A MOST DANGEROUS GAME Lions are eating African refugees while conservationists look the other way. reviewed by David Baron The Man-Eaters of Eden by Robert Frump The End of the Line: How Overfishing Is Changing the World and What We Eat by Charles Clover Whales, Whaling, and Ocean Ecosystems edited by James A. Estes et al FROM READERS YOUR LETTERS AND COMMENTS THINK AGAIN LIKE HUMANS, LIKE ELEPHANTS by Martin Meredith |
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