...perhaps the single most important book to be published in the last decade of conservation/environmental sciences literature. --Lon Drake, Natural Areas Journal
Read this book: Two of the nation+ås top conservation biologists...present a science-based approach to policies and practices to maintain biodiversity.... Saving Nature+ås Legacy should be read by every land and resource manager and by their supervisors and the leaders who set policy decisions.... A single book cannot change natural resource management in the United States, but for those who want to try, Saving Nature+ås Legacy explains how. --David E. Blockstein, BioScience
...offers the most comprehensive direction to date on what the United States can do to stop the downward spiral of ecosystem deterioration and to implement policies of +¦no net loss+¦ of the nation+ås native biological riches.... Who needs this book? Conservation biologists should read it to better understand the challenges and practical demands of putting theory into practice. Managers should read it to more fully understand the rationale and context for new management concepts, and to be better able to apply the concepts toward useful purpose in ecosystem management.... Actually this would be a good book for all citizens to read, if only to see what could be were we to muster the will to alter our individual and collective behaviors. --Winifred B. Kessler, Journal of Forestry