Nature's Strongholds: The World's Great Wildlife Reserves

Front Cover
Princeton University Press, 2005 - Nature - 672 pages

Bengal tigers in the jungles of India. Birds of Paradise in the wilds of New Guinea. Penguins on frozen beaches in Antarctica. These and other charismatic and endangered species find homes within the world's great wildlife reserves. Only a few persons have had the opportunity to visit many of these wildlife sanctuaries and witness these magnificent animals firsthand. Now, for the first time, the splendor of the world's most impressive wildlife reserves is captured on the printed page in this gloriously illustrated book by naturalists Laura and Bill Riley.

The Rileys, who received Pulitizer Prize nominations for their book on American wildlife refuges, spent ten years researching this book, visiting reserves on every continent. The 600 sanctuaries featured were chosen on the basis of exhaustive on-scene reports, interviews, and personal experiences. From Ecuador's Gálapagos Islands to Tanzania's renowned Serengeti, they represent the last places on earth where the natural world remains intact. Some of the reserves are as large as European countries, others the size of small farms. Many are growing as people everywhere become aware of their beauty and importance.

The book includes information on each sanctuary's historical and ecological significance, details about how to visit and what to see, and a comprehensive index for locating individual species.

A feast for the eyes, Nature's Strongholds offers a magical excursion into these majestic-and seldom seen-paradises. Anyone who has ever dreamed of taking such a journey will long to have this book.

Includes?


  • 150 color photographs

  • Information on each reserve's historical and ecological significance

  • details on best times to visit as well as monthly temperature and rainfall

  • descriptions of habitats

  • 75 detailed maps

 

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Page 203 - Protection and improvement of environment and safeguarding of forests and wild life. -The State shall endeavour to protect and improve the environment and to safeguard the forests and wild life of the country.
Page 621 - And this, too, in New Guinea ! — a country which I might never visit again, — a country which no naturalist had ever resided in before, — a country which contained more strange and new and beautiful natural objects than any other part of the globe. The naturalist will be able to appreciate my feelings, sitting from morning to night in my little hut, unable to move without a crutch, and my only solace the birds my hunters brought in every afternoon, and the few insects caught by my Ternate man,...
Page 629 - Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Visayas Avenue, Diliman, Quezon City (tel: 929-6633; fax: 920-4352).
Page 86 - Beyond rose abruptly and very precipitously the black, uninhabited mountains of the Aberdare range. These features, however, were not what had fascinated me. It was something more distant. Through a rugged and picturesque depression in the range rose a gleaming snow-white peak with sparkling facets, which scintillated with the superb beauty of a colossal diamond.
Page 444 - Gwaii Haanas National Park, Reserve and Haida Heritage Site, PO Box 37, Queen Charlotte, BC VOT ISO, Canada...
Page 173 - Antarctic region for at least 50 years, requires environmental assessment of all activities, and designates Antarctica as a "natural reserve, devoted to peace and science".
Page 409 - Secretary of State, Department of the Environment, Ministry of Water Management, Forests and the Environment, R-Bucharest-Artera Noiia NS, Tronson 5-6, Sector 5, Bucharest.
Page 396 - ... part of a large island" when he discovered what he was looking at was a walrus.
Page 542 - Lauca but more difficult to access are Reserva Nacional Las Vicuñas and Monumento Natural Salar de Surire...
Page 524 - The objective is to provide a complete overview of the last ten years of research on biodiversity, conservation and management at the reserve. Papers and posters are requested. Proceedings will be published. For additional information, contact: Carmen Miranda, Academia Nacional de Ciencias de Bolivia, Av. 16 de Julio 1732, Casilla 5829, La Paz, Bolivia. Tel./Fax: (59...

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