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CALIFORNIA WILD
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Fall
2002
Vol. 55:4
Many bat species, such as this dawn bat,
are important nighttime pollinators. Their facial whiskers carry
pollen from flower to flower.
Image by Merlin D. Tuttle/Bat Conservation
International
Departments
Life
On The Edge
When the Light Goes Out
Keith K. Howell
Horizons
Turn Off the Lights!
Kathleen Wong
Habitats
Salamanders Rock
Gordy Slack
Counterpoints
in Science
Crazy about Food
Jerold M. Lowenstein
Here
At The Academy
The Reluctant Astronomer
Cameron Walker
Letters
to the Editor
Bonobos
Reviews
Erika Kelly
on Gorillas
Adrian Barnett
on Museums
Karen Cebra
on Corpses
Editors' Recommendations
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Features
Whiskers!
A Feel for the Dark
From manatees to mice, mammals stay in touch with a dark world by
deploying their amazing whiskers.
Kathleen M. Wong
Night
Bloomers
As twilight descends each evening,
a whole new cast of characters--bats, moths and other insects--assembles
to visit flowers that bloom only at night
Andrei Sourakov
At
Home in the
Natural World
Skyguide
Lord of the Rings
Bing F. Quock
Naturalist's
Almanac
What to Look for This Fall
David Lukas
A
C loser Look
The inhabitants of Empire Cave
Suzanne Ubick
Not available
online:
Lenses in the Sky
The power of gravity bends light and pulls distant galaxies into
focus.
Robert Irion
Wild Lives
Ringtails: Black and White Acrobats
Phil Barber
Desert Dreamers
Common poorwills sleep the winter away.
Kim Todd
Denizens of the Dirt
Living in cold, clammy soil calls for a suite of strange survival
skills. Moles, gophers, and a lizard missing legs show how to get
down in the dirt.
Liese Greensfelder
The Cave that Microbes Built
The fantastic formations in one of North America's largest caves
were etched by a crew of billions. Visit the microbial wonders of
Lechuguilla Cave.
Pamela Turner
Hell's Gape
Hot gases spewed by fissures along the ocean bed sustain whole
communities of animals that survive without sunlight.
Anne M. Rosenthal
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