Eyes & Ears
READING
Bureaucratic Landscapes: Interagency Cooperation and the Preservation of Biodiversity (1/03). Author Craig Thomas provides a detailed history of the California Biodiversity Council, from the roots of the MOU on Biodiversity in the 1980s to various efforts to develop bioregional councils in the Klamath and San Joaquin Valley bioregions in the early 1990s and the subsequent successes of NCCP. Available for $27.95 from MIT Press.
http://www.mitpress.mit.edu.
Plants of the San Francisco Bay Region: Mendocino to Monterey (02/03). Authors Linda Beidleman and Eugene Kozloff offer a definitive botanical guide to the wetlands, woodlands, coastlines, hills, and valleys of the San Francisco Bay Region. Available from UC Press, $29.95.
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9590.htm.
The World’s Water 2002–2003: The Biennial Report on Freshwater Resources. This is the third in a series by author Peter Gleick that tracks the state of the world’s water, the debate regarding it, and the technology that has the potential to address some of the issues. Available from Island Press.
http://www.islandpress.org/books/.
Trends in Fisheries and Fishery Resources (2002). Fisheries in central California are part of this region's rich cultural and economic history. Authors Richard Starr, Jason Cope, and Lisa Kerr summarize the technical concepts used to estimate the population sizes of harvested species. More information available from California Sea Grant.
http://www-csgc.ucsd.edu/PUBLICATIONS/announce046.html.
From Garden City to Green City: The Legacy of Ebenezer Howard (2002) by Kermit C. Parsons and David Schuyler. In this new volume of essays, some of the finest thinkers on modern city planning—including William Fulton, Robert Fishman, Eugene Birch, Steven Ward, Pierre Clavel, and others—discuss the impact on American cities of Howard's groundbreaking 1898 book, To–Morrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform. Available from the California Planning and Development Report.
www.cp-dr.com.
Water and the California Dream: Choices for the New Millenium (04/03). Using oral histories, newspaper articles, and autobiographies, author David Carle explores the historic changes in California, showing how imported water has shaped the pattern of population growth in the state. Available for $16.95 from UC Press.
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/sc/pages/SC50952.html.
Farming with the Wild: A New Vision for Conservation–Based Agriculture (04/03). Presenting an inspiring look at this new conservation–based agriculture, authors Dan Imhoff and Roberto Carra offer vivid profiles of more than thirty innovative farms, ranches, and organizations in the U.S., together with more than one hundred revealing full–color photographs. Available for $29.95 from UC Press.
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/sc/pages/SC50928.html.
COMPUTER RESOURCES
VIDEO
A free video on the use of GIS in local land use planning is available. Geographic Information Systems (GIS):
Improving Local Decision Making was commisioned by the CBC in 1994 and is still available by sending your request
by email to Erin Klaesius or by fax to 916.227.2672.
Eyes & Ears is compiled by Erin Klaesius, Communications Coordinator for the CBC. Submissions for the Fall/Winter and Spring/Summer
issues will be considered if sent to the CBC by January and July, respectively.
California Biodiversity News: Volume 10, Number 1
Spring/Summer 2003
For more information on the California Biodiversity Council, please contact:
Erin Klaesius, Communications Coordinator
CA Biodiversity Council
1416 Ninth Street, Suite 1311
Sacramento, CA 95814
Email: erin.klaesius@fire.ca.gov
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