Audubon, Jan./Feb. 2001
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Audubon, Jan./Feb. 2001
The press and politicians called fire season 2000 "a natural disaster." The fires were natural, but the "disaster" was how much the United States spent to fight them.
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Fly Rod & Reel, Jan./Feb. 2001
Wise-use zealots bash feds and bull trout in Nevada
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Blue Ridge Press, October 2001
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Fly Rod & Reel, Nov./Dec. 2001
Planned earthquakes under America's waterways.
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Audubon, Nov./Dec. 2001
The USDA wants to poison 2 million blackbirds a year to save sunflower crops in the Upper Midwest. Trouble is, the department's own data suggest the plan won't work.
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Audubon, Nov./Dec. 2001
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Audubon, Mar./Apr. 2001
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Audubon, Mar./Apr. 2001
If a species is essential to religious practices of Native Americans, why would they recklessly kill it? And why would the Feds encourage them?
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Fly Rod & Reel, March 2001
Biologists often are hamstrung by paranoid opponents.
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Fly Rod & Reel, April 2001
A bill to fulfill the promise of the Clean Water Act.
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Audubon, May/June 2001
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Audubon, May/June 2001
West Virginia's coal companies are altering the state's very surface, and no one seems to have the power--or the will--to stop them.
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Fly Rod & Reel, June 2001
The first casualty of the Asian black carp is a person.
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Audubon, July/Aug. 2001
A healthy Lake Okeechobee is the only hope for the Everglades, but is there hope for the lake?
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Fly Rod & Reel, July/Oct. 2001
They've survived in spite of us.
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Blue Ridge Press, August 2001
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Audubon, Sept./Oct. 2001
The specter of West Nile virus has given new urgency to the annual assault on mosquitoes. But what are the real costs of this chemical warfare?
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Audubon, Sept./Oct. 2001
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