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National Wildlife
Articles in June-July 2002 issue of National Wildlife
- Sportsmen Help Protect Mammal Habitat
- THE MURRES THE MERRIER - Decoys, mirrors and mood music lure gregarious seabirds back to abandoned breeding colonies
by Laura Helmuth - NWF View - opposition to Bush administration plans to tap resources of National Wildlife Refuges
- This Issue
- Kentucky Student Develops "Buy Recycled" Policy
- NORTH AMERICA S FISH FEEL THE HEAT - How will climate change affect fish? New studies from across the continent provide some dramatic and troublesome answers
by T. Edward Nickens - NWF Leads Fight for Texas Water
- Grant Recipients Plant Endangered Pondberry
- The Abominable Snow Trend - melting glaciers and rising sea levels
- Climate Change's Impacts on Wildlife
- Donated Land to Provide City Nature Habitat
- Bug Off - spices that repel insects - Brief Article
- Global Warming: Species' Habitats Risk Major Changes
- Ten Birds That Help Control Garden Pests
by Sarah Boyle - Battle of the Sexes - how sexual behavior of insects is related to evolution - Brief Article
- New Partnership Monitors Declining U.S. Amphibians
- "LITTLE SCUM" TAKES ON BIG MINING - Bruno Van Peteghem's campaign to protect the South Pacific island of New Caledonia has earned him both scorn and praise
by Paul Tolm - "Cool" Video Examines Effects of Consumerism
- How to Enter the 2002 National Wildlife Photography Competition
- SEDUCED BY SIFAKAS - On a quest for images of some of Earth's rarest primates, two wildlife photographers journey to the remote island of Madagascar
- eNature Provides Park Service Species Info
- SEEKING SAFE PASSAGE - Scientists are increasingly discovering the benefits of protecting corridors that connect isolated wildlife habitats
by Jessica Snyder Sachs - Spectacle on Mount Chaparri - Visionary thinkers in Peru launch a private reserve to help endangered bears and reward local people
by Tui De Roy - Annual Meeting Celebrates Conservation
- CREATURES THAT TIME FORGOT - From a handful of bugs and birds to mountain beavers, species that have changed little after tens to hundreds of millions of years both fascinate and puzzle biologists who study "living fossils"
by Lisa W. Drew - Restoring Streams to Their Natural Glory
by Jessica Snyder Sachs - Georgia Volunteer Embraces Chattachoochee
- Letters
- RETURN TO THE Heartland - Absent from the Midwest for most of the past century, the regal trumpeter swan is making an impressive comeback
by Gayle Worland