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THIS WEEK IN
CALIFORNIA WILD

Spring 2001
Vol. 53:2

cover spring 2001

Sunrise ignites the furry spikes of a cattail stand. Dawn's heat quickens the life of the marsh, warming insect wings enough to fly and rousing other residents to the coming day.

Photograph by Michael Sewell.

Departments
Life on the Edge
The Moving Finger
Keith K. Howell

Horizons
Too Warm for the Maya
Kathleen M. Wong

Habitats
Amargosa: Death Valley's Secret River
Gordy Slack

Counterpoints in Science
The Literate Freud
Jerold M. Lowenstein

Here At The Academy
Fishing for Ants
Maggie McKee

Letters
Threatened Oak Ecosystems
China Credits

Reviews
Suzanne Ubick
on Promiscuity
Jay Withgott
on Sibley and Kaufman birding guides
Editors' Recommendations

Features
The Female Line: an interview with Sarah Blaffer Hrdy
Anthropologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy has shown that primate females play a critical role in choosing the fathers of their offspring and in the continuing evolution of their species.
Blake Edgar

Panspermia
As evidence that life may hitchhike through the universe on comets and asteroids accumulates, astrobiologists theorize that life on Earth may have come from outer space.
Jay Withgott

At Home in the
Natural World

Naturalist's Almanac
What to Look for this Spring
Liese Greensfelder

Skyguide
Mars Aligned
Bing F. Quock

Wild Lives
Frozen Frogs
Pamela Turner

Trail Less Traveled
It's a Vertical Life
Sharif Taha

Not available online:
Science Track
The Circle in the Mission
Helen Wagenvoord

Captivating Exposures
Close-up photographs of the working parts of flowers reveal the intricate ways in which plants disperse their pollen.
Margaret Ely

From Birds in the Hand to Birds in the Bush
The survival of Hawaii's native birds hangs by a precarious thread. At the Keauhou Bird Conservation Center on Hawaii, eight endangered species are hatched and reared in captivity, then released back into the wild.
Deborah Knight

The Tragedy of the Carp
As the water in a restored 90-acre wetland north of San Francisco subsides in spring, fish are stranded, scavengers feast, and nature follows its inevitable course.
Kenneth Brower
Photography by Michael Sewell