Audubon, Jan./Mar. 2003
Last fall's salmon die-off on the Klamath River was an ecological catastrophe born of gross watershed abuse. It was also predictable, avoidable, and utterly typical of White House priorities.
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Audubon, Jan./Mar. 2003
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Fly Rod & Reel, Jan./Feb. 2003
It seems you can fool most of the people...
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Outdoors Unlimited, January 2003
For too many fly-fishers, the definition of doing something for fly-fishing isn't ensuring their sport by saving a part of earth's genetic wealth. It's inviting them onto private property to angle for weed fish.
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Blue Ridge Press, January 2003
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Audubon, Oct./Dec. 2003
A rogue industry out of control, the wild-pet business endangers not only people but entire species by spreading disease, destroying habitat, and fueling hostility toward nature.
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Fly Rod & Reel, Oct./Dec. 2003
Suddenly There Is Hope for Marine Fish
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Audubon, Oct./Dec. 2003
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High Country News, December 2003
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Fly Rod & Reel, March 2003
The federal government is giving away our Western rivers.
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Fly Rod & Reel, April 2003
A different twist on clearing out aliens to save a native fish.
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Audubon, Apr./June 2003
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Audubon, Apr./June 2003
Understaffed, underfunded, and underappreciated, national wildlife refuges cannot survive without the help of friends. But making them a success story will require vanquishing their number one foe: species that don't belong.
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High Country News, April 2003
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Fly Rod & Reel, June 2003
The feds abandon protection for our headwater streams.
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Audubon, July/Sept. 2003
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Audubon, July/Sept. 2003
Good fish managers, like good parents, eventually learn that one of the kindest words they can utter is "no."
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Fly Rod & Reel, July/Oct. 2003
Did the feds cut a good deal with Plum Creek Timber Company?
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Mother Jones, September 2003
It was only a small environmental rule change by Bush's EPA. But it's threatening Florida's Suwannee River -- and the nation's wetlands.
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