Aversive Conditioning in Conservation
Field observations, similar to those examples mentioned in my last blog, show that aversive conditioning is pervasive throughout the natural... Read More →
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Field observations, similar to those examples mentioned in my last blog, show that aversive conditioning is pervasive throughout the natural... Read More →
Everyone knows that monarch butterflies are protected from birds to some extent by the toxic chemistry they inherit from caterpillars... Read More →
Back on Dec. 1, 2016, I offered you a story about the historical medicinal aspects of sassafras and its role... Read More →
In the arid American West, there resides a genus of bushes, which by Midwestern standards appear hardly alive. The half-dozen... Read More →
Longtime readers may recall that five years ago I built a 1 1/2 story trellis which runs 50 feet, the... Read More →
This is a story about our love affair with coumarin, a chemical produced by many members of the plant kingdom.... Read More →
Rhododendrons in bloom on a mountaintop along the Blue Ridge Parkway, western Virginia and North Carolina. Photo from Encyclopedia Britannica.... Read More →
As the calendar rolled over from the 1700s to the 1800s, pioneers from the Eastern Seaboard states were moving westward... Read More →
There are many ways to take a hike, especially with camera in hand. A time-honored way of experiencing a foray... Read More →
Crown vetch is one of our most difficult invasive species to eradicate from a prairie, whether original or recreated. In... Read More →