Tropical deforestation. The collapse of fisheries.
Unprecedented levels of species extinction. Faced with
the plethora of gloom-and-doom headlines about the
natural world, we might think that environmental
disaster is inevitable. But is there any good news about
the environment? Yes, there is, answers Andrew Balmford
in ''Wild Hope'', and he offers several powerful stories
of successful conservation to prove it. This tragedy is
still avoidable, and there are many reasons for hope if
we find inspiration in stories of effective
environmental recovery. ''Wild Hope'' is organized
geographically, with each chapter taking readers to
extraordinary places to meet conservation's heroes and
foot soldiers - and to discover the new ideas they are
generating about how to make conservation work on our
hungry and crowded planet. The journey starts in the
floodplains of Assam, where dedicated rangers and
exceptionally tolerant villagers have together helped
bring Indian rhinos back from the brink of extinction.
In the pine forests of the Carolinas, we learn why
plantation owners came to resent rare woodpeckers - and
what persuaded them to change their minds.In South
Africa, Balmford investigates how invading alien plants
have been drinking the country dry, and how the Southern
Hemisphere's biggest conservation program is now
simultaneously restoring the rivers, saving species, and
creating tens of thousands of jobs. The conservation
problems Balmford encounters are as diverse as the
people and their actions, but together they offer common
themes and specific lessons on how to win the battle of
conservation - and the one essential ingredient,
Balmford shows, is most definitely hope. ''Wild Hope''
is a clear-eyed view of the difficulties and challenges
of conservation, offering innovative solutions and
powerful stories. A global tour of people and programs
working for the planet, ''Wild Hope'' is an emboldening
green journey. |
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