Managing for Enhancement of Riparian and Wetland Areas of the Western United States

Managing for Enhancement of Riparian and Wetland Areas of the Western United States

Author: David A. Koehler

Publisher:

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 376

ISBN-13:

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This annotated bibliography contains 1,905 citations from professional journals, symposia, workshops, proceedings, technical reports, and other sources. The intent of this compilation was to: (1) assemble, to the extent possible, all available and accessible publications relating to riparian management within a single source or document; (2) provide managers, field biologists, researchers, and others, a point of access for locating scientific literature relevent to their specific interest; and (3) provide, under one cover, a comprehensive collection of annotated publications that could dessiminate basic information relative to the status of our knowledge.


Proceedings of a Conference on Sustainability of Wetlands and Water Resources

Proceedings of a Conference on Sustainability of Wetlands and Water Resources

Author: Marjorie Holland

Publisher:

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 204

ISBN-13:

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The conference focused on recent work in freshwater wetlands [both natural and constructed] with a view toward understanding wetland processes in a watershed context. Since humans have played important roles in watershed dynamics for years, attention was given to the human dimensions of wetland and watershed uses. Contributed sessions were organized on: biogeochemical cycling in wetlands; human health issues related to water; wetland restoration and reforestation; the role of wetlands in agricultural systems; wetlands and USA environmental law; chemical ecology and natural products from wetlands; water and wetlands in science education; and regional water strategies.


Linking Industry and Ecology

Linking Industry and Ecology

Author: Ann Dale

Publisher: UBC Press

Published: 2007-11-01

Total Pages: 287

ISBN-13: 0774857218

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The contributors to this volume draw on their experience in a variety of disciplines to explore the origins, promise, and relevance of the emerging field of industrial ecology. They situate industrial ecology within the broader range of environmental management strategies and concepts, from the practices of pollution prevention through life cycle management, to the more fundamental shift toward dematerialization and ecological design. Their work not only affirms what has been learned to date in this nascent field but also provides new insight by demonstrating that technologies are socially and politically embedded. This book makes a compelling argument for the need to think ecologically to develop innovative and competitive industrial policy.