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Forests in Peril: Tracking Deciduous Trees from Ice-Age Refuges into the Greenhouse World


by Hazel R. Delcourt

List Price: $24.95
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 1089295
Studio: McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company
Binding: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 244
Publication Date: October 08, 2002
Publisher: McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company


EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description
Delcourt takes readers on her personal journey to document the history of the forest from its elusive and nebulous presence at the peak of the last ice age through its development as a magnificent natural resource to its uncertainty in today's, and tomorrow's, greenhouse world. Along this journey, the reader is introduced to methods of studying vegetation, collecting and interpreting data, and applying the insights of forest ecology and history to project future needs of the forest in a world that is increasingly dominated by human activities. The philosophical, intellectual, and methodological perspectives contained in the book will appeal to readers interested in understanding how the natural history of North America has been studied and how that study can contribute to the protection and preservation of America's important biological resources.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 1 review)

A Deep-Time Perspective on Global Warming  
This is the book that launched our citizen naturalists group on the internet: Torreya Guardians. In reading Hazel's book, I was struck by how important the "pocket reserves" were to the preservation of rich forest species during the peak of the last glacial episode some 18,000 years ago (as well as all the previous glacial episodes). One of those pocket reserves runs along the edge of the Apalachicola River in the Florida Panhandle. And it is here that the most endangered conifer tree in the world, Torreya taxifolia, is gravely imperiled.

Torreya taxifolia was just one of many species that hunkered down in this furthest south patch of rich soil, while cold-adapted spruces dominated the landscape in Georgia and points north. But as the glacial subsided and warming ensued, it was time for Torreya and its companions to begin their migration north, back into the Appalachian Mountains and beyond. For one reason or another, however, Torreya taxifolia was left behind. It did not disperse back to the north; it just lingered in the little Florida reserve. Thus, even without post-1960s increases in atmospheric CO2, Torreya taxifolia would have been doomed without human assistance. For in the 1960s was when it stopped producing seeds. But because ecologists are not trained with a deep-time perspective, "native range" for this beleaguered tree is still considered to be only where it was historically found -- not where it likely was found pre-historically, during previous interglacial episodes.

"Forests in Peril" was thus a wake-up call for myself and others who joined to discuss and take actions to save this tree in ways that mainstream ecology and the Endangered Species Act still do not allow: by engaging in "assisted migration" ("assisted colonization") for this beautiful relative of the yew. We formed www.torreyaguardians.org, and in July 2008 we purchased from a plant nursery 31 seedlings of Torreya taxifolia and planted them ("rewilded" them) into forested landscapes of two private properties in the mountains of North Carolina. Welcome home, Torreya taxifolia! And thank you, Hazel Delcourt, for your magnificent and worldview-shifting book.

(review written by) Connie Barlow (spouse of Amazon.com member Michael Dowd)
Founder of Torreya Guardians, author of "The Ghosts of Evolution"
August 28, 2008


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Prehistoric Native Americans and Ecological Change: Human Ecosystems in Eastern North America since the Pleistocene
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The Ghosts of Evolution: Nonsensical Fruit, Missing Partners, and Other Ecological Anachronisms
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