"A poet is, after all, a sort of scientist, but engaged in a qualitative science in which nothing is measurable. He lives with data that cannot be numbered, and his experiments can be done only once." --Lewis Thomas
Recommended Reading |
Scientific Literature |
Abbey, Edward. Desert Solitaire
Bogard, Paul. The End of Night Carson, Rachel. Silent Spring and The Sea Around Us Dillard, Annie. Pilgrim at Tinker Creek Fausch, Kurt. For the Love of Rivers Leopold, Aldo. Sand County Almanac Lopez, Barry. Artic Dreams Muir, John. My First Summer in the Sierra Thomas, Lewis. The Lives of a Cell Thoreau, Henry David. Walden; or, Life in the Woods Vaillant, John. The Golden Spruce Weiner, Jonathan. Beak of the Finch |
Allan, J. D., Flecker, A. S. and McClintock. 1986. Diel epibenthic activity of mayfly nymphs, and its nonconcordance with behavioral drift. Limnology and Oceanography 31: 1057-1065.
Bishop, J. E. 1969. Light control of aquatic insect activity and drift. Ecology 50: 371-380. Chaston, I. 1969. The light threshold controlling the periodicity of invertebrate drift. Journal of Animal Ecology 38: 171-180. Flecker, A. S. 1992. Fish predation and the evolution of invertebrate drift periodicity: evidence from neotropical streams. Ecology 73: 438-448. Henn, M., Nichols, H., Zhang, Y. and Bonner, T. H. 2014. Effect of artificial light on the drift of aquatic insects in urban central Texas streams. Journal of Freshwater Ecology 29 doi: 10.1080/02705060.2014.900654. McIntosh, A. R. and Peckarsky, B. L. 1999. Criteria determining behavioral responses to multiple predators by a stream mayfly. Oikos 85: 554-564. |