id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_njpaib4fnbeq3dae47d57iu72i David R. Foster From bobolinks to bears: interjecting geographical history into ecological studies, environmental interpretation, and conservation planning 2000.0 4 .pdf application/pdf 3117 250 61 is foolhardy to make any ecological interpretation of modern landscapes or environments or to formulate policy in conservation or natural resource management without an historical context that extends Failure to appreciate the human element in these lands certainly leads to erroneous ecological interpretations, misdirected research emphases, and misguided approaches to management (Gomez-Pompa Over the next century in many landscapes, including the Northeastern U.S., the history of the land will continue to control ecological processes and influence future changes more than much-debated global This region's history of landscape transformation—from forest to new forests and their wildlife form a very cultural landscape controlled in most aspects by prior, and that best explains the age, height, and composition of modern woodlands is the history of past land-use A regional analysis of modern forest composition in central New England reveals no regional forest dynamics in central New England. (1998) Ecology and conservation in the cultural landscape of New England: ./cache/work_njpaib4fnbeq3dae47d57iu72i.pdf ./txt/work_njpaib4fnbeq3dae47d57iu72i.txt