Title: Emerging tools and institutions to conserve oak woodlands: integrating public trust and private benefits, or can we ever get paid for doing the right thing?
Author: Wayburn, Laurie A.
Date: 2002
Source: In: Standiford, Richard B., et al, tech. editor. Proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Oak Woodlands: Oaks in California's Challenging Landscape. Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-184, Albany, CA: Pacific Southwest Research Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture: 31-39
Station ID: GTR-PSW-184
Description: This conference on "Oaks in California's Changing Landscape" is a most timely and important conference at a critical time in California. Having been born and raised in California, I have never known a time when this landscape was not changing. And, usually not for the better if you care about our natural environment, as I do. But, today it is changing at an ever-increasing rate and scale, and the forces of restoration and conservation of that natural landscape seem even more outpaced by those of development and degradation.
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Citation
Wayburn, Laurie A. 2002. Emerging tools and institutions to conserve oak woodlands: integrating public trust and private benefits, or can we ever get paid for doing the right thing?. In: Standiford, Richard B., et al, tech. editor. Proceedings of the Fifth Symposium on Oak Woodlands: Oaks in California's Challenging Landscape. Gen. Tech. Rep. PSW-GTR-184, Albany, CA: Pacific Southwest Research Station, Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture: 31-39.