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05/2002. xiv, 534 pages.
0896724697
|978-0-89672-469-3
$39.95 cloth
Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.
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Texas Natural History: A Century of Change By David J. Schmidly Forewords by Andrew Sansom and Robert J. Potts Afterword by Clyde Jones
Donovan Stewart Correll Memorial Award
One hundred years ago, Texas was very different. A rural population was spread thinly across the eastern and central parts of the state, and vast lands in the western regions were still undisturbed. Wolves, both gray and red; black bears; black-footed ferrets; cougars; and many other species of wildlife that are now reduced or extinct were common then.
In 1905, Vernon Bailey, chief naturalist for the U.S. Biological Survey, published his comprehensive survey of the status of mammals in Texas at that time. Now, nearly one hundred years later, David Schmidly compares Baileys report with the status of mammals in the state today. The result is a look back at what has happened to the natural environment in Texas during the twentieth century.
Baileys 216-page survey report is included as chapter 2. In chapter 3, Schmidly annotates the report, and in the three following chapters he discusses changes in landscapes, land use, and the status of mammals in the last hundred years. The closing chapter looks ahead at the authors projection into the twenty-first century and coming challenges for wildlife conservation.
Photographs from the early years of the twentieth century and maps of the distribution of mammals then and now illustrate the volume, which also contains a cross-reference list of scientific names and common names of mammals and plants and an extensive reference list.
This book will give Texans a close and authoritative view of how their land once looked. More importantly, it will tell them what has happened to their wildlife heritage and what they might do to protect it in the future.
Introduction Biological Survey of Texas, 1889-1905 Annotations to the Biological Survey of Texas Texas Landscapes, 1889-1905 Twentieth-Century Changes in Texas Landscapes and Land Uses Twentieth-Century Changes in Texas Mammal Fauna A Look to the Twenty-first Century: Challenges for Wildlife Conservation in Texas
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