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Full Bibliography - Paul R. Ehrlich 1948. Field notes on the eye colors of the Colias eurythem-philodice complex; the parasitization of Danaus plexippus and the use of "flyways" by Papilio glaucus. Lepidopterists' News, 2:92. 1951. A new Atrytone from Nebraska (Lepidoptera: Hesperioidea). Entomological News, 62:188-189. (with N.W. Gillham). 1952a. (Review) A Field Guide to the Butterflies of North America, East of the Great Plains, by Alexander B. Klots. Entomological News, 63:26-27. 1952b. The distribution and subspeciation of Erebia rossii Curtis (Lepidoptera: Satyridae). Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 78:75-88. 1952c. A new subspecies of Erebia epipsodea Butler (Lepidoptera: Satyridae). Entomological News, 63:225-23l. 1954a. Two new subspecies of Erebia epipsodea Butler (Lepidoptera: Satyridae). Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society, 27:80. 1954b. The butterfly types of Henry Skinner and co-authors in the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea and Hesperioidea). Transactions of the American Entomological Society, 80:9l-ll7. (with N.W. Gillham). 1954c. The naming of subspecies in Lepidoptera. (Lepidopterists' News, 8:l00. (with N.W. Gillham). 1954d. Notes on Erebia rossii Curtis (Lepidoptera: Satyridae). Entomological News, 65:225-227. 1955. The distribution and subspeciation of Erebia epipsodea Butler (Lepidoptera: Satyridae). University of Kansas Science Bulletin, 37:l75-l94. 1956a. Ecological observations on Erebia (Lepidoptera: Satyridae) in northwestern America. Entomological News, 67:29-35. 1956b. The use of the Leitz "Ultropak" microscope for studying the scales of Lepidoptera in situ Lepidopterists' News, l0:l60. 1957a. (Abstract). Factors affecting pupation site in Drosophila. Anatomical Record,128:525-626. (with R.R. Sokal, P.E. Hunter and G. Schlager). 1957b. Systematists and subspecies. Lepidopterists' News, 11:4-5:l55-l57. 1958a. Lepidoptera collected in the tundra-taiga ecotone at Kotzebue, Alaska. Entomological News, 69:l7-20. 1958b. The integumental anatomy of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus L. (Lepidoptera: Danaidae). University of Kansas Science Bulletin, 38:l3l5-l349, 4l figs. 1958c. Mosquito records from the Chukchi Sea coast of northwestern Alaska. Mosquito News, l8:l2-l4. (with A.R. Barr). 1958d. The higher systematics of the butterflies. Lepidopterists' News, 11:l03-l06. 1958f. The comparative morphology, phylogeny and higher classification of the butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoid ea). University of Kansas Science Bulletin, 39:305-370. 1958g. Problems of arctic-alpine insect distribution as illustrated by the butterfly genus Erebia (Satyridae). Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Entomology, 1:683-686. 1958h. Butterflies. Collier's Encyclopedia, vol. 4, p. 274 et seq. 1958i. Natural selection in water snakes (Natrix sipedon L.) on islands in Lake Erie. Evolution, 12:504-511. (with J.H. Camin). 1959a. (Review) Insect Migration, by C.B. Williams. Science, 129:205-206. 1959b. A note on the systematic position of the butterfly genus Calinaga (Nymphalidae). Lepidopterists' News, 12:5-6. p. 173. 1959c. (Review) The World of Insects, by Paul Pesson; Grassblade Jungle, by Nesta Pain; Collecting, Preserving and Studying Insects, by Harold Oldroyd. Science, l30:26l. 1959d. Problems of higher classification. Systematic Zoology, 7:l80-l84. 1960a. ("1959") A "hit and run" trip to Texas and New Mexico. Lepidopterists' News, l3:99-l00. (with D.B. Stallings and J.R. Turner). 1960b. A cage for maintaining stock colonies of parasitic mites and their hosts. Journal of Parasitology, 46:l09-lll. (with J.H. Camin). 1960c. Natural selection in Middle Island water snakes (Natrix sipedon L.). Evolution, l4:l36. (with J.H. Camin). 1960d. Some factors affecting pupation site of Drosophila. Annals of Entomological Society of America, 53:174-182. (with R.R. Sokal, P.E. Hunter, G. Schlager). 1960e. The integumental anatomy of the silver-spotted skipper, Epargyreus clarus Cramer (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae). Microentomology, 24:l-23. 1960f. A new subgenus and species of Callophrys (s.l.) from the southwestern United States (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae). Entomological News, 7l:l37-l4l. 1960g. A note on the systematic position of the giant lycaenid butterfly Liphyra brassolis Westwood (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea). Pan-Pacific Entomologist, 36:l33-l35. 1960h. Lepidoptera. In: McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, pp. 459-473. 1960i. Integumental anatomy (reprint). In: Urquhart, The Monarch Butterfly, pp. 2l5-242. University of Toronto Press. 1960j. Harmonization of concepts of higher classificationof the Papilionidae. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, l4:l69-l75. (with E. Munroe). 196la. How to Know the Butterflies. Wm. C. Brown Company, Dubuque, Iowa. 262 pp., 525 figs. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1961b. The internal anatomy of the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus L. (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae). Microentomology, 24:85-l33. (with S.E. Davidson). 1961c. Studies of the population structure of the checkerspot butterfly, Euphydryas editha, l960. Research Report No. 1, Jasper Ridge Biological Experimental Area, pp. l-2. 1961d. Techniques for capture-recapture studies of Lepidoptera populations. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, l4:227-229. (with S.E. Davidson). 1961e. Intrinsic barriers to dispersal in the checkerspot butterfly Euphydryas editha. Science, l34:l08-l09. 1961f. The comparative morphology of the male reproductive system of the butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea). I. Some nearctic species. Microentomology, 24:135-166. 196lg. Systematics in l970: some unpopular predictions. Systematic Zoology, l0:l57-l58. 196lh. Has the biological species concept outlived its usefulness? Systematic Zoology, 10:167-176. 1962a. (Abstract) The problem of the control in research in higher systematics. Verh. XI Int. Kongress f. Entomologie, l:l27. 1962b. The head musculature of the butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea). Microentomology, 25:1-89. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1962c. Patterns and populations. Science, 137:652-657. (with R.W. Holm). 1962d. A biting midge ectoparasitic on Arizonal lycaenids. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, l6:20-22. 1962e. Notes on the life history of Callophrys (Sandia) mcfarlandi, Ehrlich and Clench. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, 16:55-57. (with D.B. Stallings and J.R. Turner). 1962f. Reply to Amadon. Science, 138:734. (with R.W. Holm). 1962g. Reply to Webster. Science, 139:238-242. (with R.W. Holm). 1963a. The Process of Evolution. McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York. (with R.W. Holm). 1963b. The thoracic and basal abdominal musculature of the butterflies (Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea). Microentomology, 25:9l-l26. (with A.H.Ehrlich) 1964a. A Biological View of Race. In: The Concept of Race, Ashley Montague, ed. Free Press of Glencoe. (with R.W. Holm). 1964b. Some axioms of taxonomy. Systematic Zoology, l3:l09-123. 1965a. Butterflies and plants: a study in coevolution. Evolution, l8:586-608. (with P.H. Raven). 1965b. (Review) Phenetic and Phylogenetic Classification, A symposium. V.H. Heywood, ed. The Systematic Associa tion, London. Evolution, l9:363-364. 1965c. "l984." Chemistry, 38:l2-l7. 1965d. The population biology of the butterfly, Euphydryas editha. II. The structure of the Jasper Ridge Colony. Evolution, 19:327-336. 1965e. The Biological Revolution. Stanford Review, 67:20-22, 46, 47. 1965f. Numerical taxonomy. Papua and New Guinea Scientific Society's Annual Report and Proceedings, 17:10-14. 1965g. I learned about flying. Flying, December, p. 86. 1966a. The Biological Revolution. Science and Math Weekly, 636(16), 6(17). 1966b. The population biology of the butterfly, Euphydryas editha. III. Selection and the phenetics of the Jasper Ridge colony. Evolution, 20:165-173. (with L.G. Mason). 1967a. The population biology of the butterfly, Euphydryas editha. V. Character clusters and asymmetry. Evolution, 21:85-91. (with L.G. Mason and T.C. Emmel). 1967b. The "Balance of Nature" and "Population Control." The American Naturalist, 101:97-107. (with L.C.). 1967c. Evolutionary history and population biology. Nature, 214:349-352. (with L.C. Birch). 1967d. Butterflies and plants. Scientific American, 216:104-113. (with P.H. Raven). 1967e. Evolutionary history and taxonomy. Systematic Zoology, 1:282-285. (with L.C. Birch). 1967f. Paying the Piper. New Scientist, 36(575):652-655. 1967g. The phenetic relationships of the butterflies. I. Adult taxonomy and the nonspecificity hypothesis. Systematic Zoology, 16:301-317. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1968a. World Population: How many people and what kind of life? Stanford Today, Series 1, No. 22:2-7, Winter. 1968b. Population, food, and environment: Is the battle lost? Oklahoma Geology Notes, 28:24-25. February. (Summaries of Symposium Papers, Austin. November l6- 17, 1967). 1968c. Das Raumschiff erde ist Uberfullt. Der Spiegel, 22(l0): 100-105. 1968d. The population biology of the butterfly, Euphydryas editha. VI. Phenetics of the Jasper Ridge Colon, 1965-66. Evolution, 22:46-54. (with L.G. Mason and T.C. Emmel). 1968e. The coming famine. Natural History, 77(5):6-l5. 1968f. The Population Bomb. A Sierra Club-Ballantine Book, N.Y. 1968g. (Review) The Limits of Man, by Hugh Nicol. Constable & Co., Ltd. New Scientist, 38:426-27. (with H.R. Hulett). 1968h. Controlling World Population. Current, 96:35-39. 1968i. The population biology of the butterfly, Euphydryas editha. VII. Has E. editha evolved a serpentine race? Evolution, 22:422-423. (with M. Johnson and A. Keith). 1968j. Principles of Modern Biology (nine volumes). Behavioral Research Laboratories, Palo Alto. (with R.W. Holm and K.B. Armitage). 1968k. Population, Food, and Environment: Is the Battle Lost? Texas Quarterly, ll(2):43-54. Summer 1968. 1968l. (Review) Thoughts on Living Systems: Towards a Theoretical Biology. (Proc. Int. Union of Bio. Sci. Symposium, Bellagio, Italy. August-September l966). C.H. Waddington, ed. Aldine, Chicago. Science. 1968m. The Population Explosion: Fact or Fiction? Sierra Club Bulletin, October l968. 1968n. Plant-herbivore coevolution: lycaenids and lupines. Science, 162:671-72. (with D.E. Breedlove). 1968o. Birth Control: The only solution. Wall Street Journal, December 3, l968. 1968p. (Letter) More on Forest Defoliation. Science, 161:964-65. (with L.E. Gilbert and P.H. Raven). 1968q. Population Control -- Earth's Last Chance? Wall Street Journal, December 3. 1969a. (Letter) Encyclical Protest. Signed by Paul Ehrlich, Ernest Mayr, and Jeffrey W. Baker. BioScience, 19:400. 1969b. World Population: is the battle lost? Readers Digest, February, l38-l40. 1969c. Population, food, and environment: Is the battle lost? The Biologist, 51:8-19. 1969d. Exploding population. Signs of the Times, 96:18-21, 25. 1969e. Controlling world population. Consultant, 9:39. 1969f. Overcrowding and us. National Parks Magazine, 43:10-12. 1969g. (Review) Too Many: A Study of Earth's Ecological Limitations, by George Borgstrom. Macmillan, New York. Natural History, p. 268. 1969h. EcoCatastrophe! Ramparts, 8:24-28. 1969i. Differentiation of populations. Science, 165:1228-1232. (with P.H. Raven). 1969j. The biological revolution. Center Magazine, II:28-30. Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, Santa Barbara. 1969k. Population and panaceas: A technological perspective. BioScience, 19:1065-71. (with J.P. Holdren). 1969l. Papers on Evolution. Little, Brown & Co., Boston, 564 pages. (Editor with R.W. Holm and P.H. Raven). 1970a. Coevolution and the biology of communities. In: Proc. 29th Annual Bio. Colloquium. Kenton L. Chambers, ed., Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, 1968. 1970b. (Report) Symposium on the Optimum Population for Britain. Biological Conservation, 2(2), January. 1970c. Population and Environment. In: Toward Century 2l, Technology, Society and Human Values. C.S.Wallia, ed. Basic Books, Inc. N.Y. pp. 53-63. 1970d. "Population Control or Hobson's Choice". In: Optimum Population for Britain. L.R. Taylor, ed. Inst. of Biology Symposium no. l9. Academic Press, London & N.Y., pp. l5l-l74. 1970e. Population structure of Erebia epipsodea. I. Population structure. Ecology, 51:119-129. (with P.F. Brussard). 1970f. Population, Resources, Environment: Issues in Human Ecology. W.H.Freeman & Co., San Francisco. 383 pp. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1970g. (Review) Seeds of Change: The Green Revolution and Development in the l970s, by Lester R. Brown. Praeger Publishers. Natural History, 79:77-78. 1970h. Insects. In: World Book Encyclopedia, 1970 edition, pp. 221-223. 1970i. Population Explosion: Facts and Fiction. In: Critical Issues for College Health, Stephen Maltz, ed. W.C.Brown, Dubuque. pp. 161-68. 1970j. (Untitled) In: Project Survival, R.C. Gesteland and J.B. Putnam, eds. Project Survival Press, Evanston. pp. 32-38. 1970k. The food from the sea myth. Saturday Review, April 4, pp. 53-55, 64. (with J.P. Holdren). 1970l. Looking backward from 2000 A.D. The Progressive, 34:23-25. 1970m. People pollution. Audubon, 72:4-9. 1970n. Population control and genocide. National Democratic Coalition Newsletter, No. 2, July. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1970o. Contrasting population biology of two species of butterfly. Nature, 227:9l-92. (with P.F. Brussard). 1970p. A note on the systematic position of Papilio antimachus. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, 24(3) August. 1970q. The affinities of the Ithomiinae and the Satyrinae (Nymphalidae). Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, 24(4) November. (with L.E. Gilbert). 1970r. Ten years to save the world. National Enquirer. Reprint from articles from London Daily Sketch, l969. 1970s. The population explosion: facts and fiction. Cross Currents, Stanford Earth Day, publisher. April 22. 1970t. Population overgrowth -- the fertile curse. Field and Stream, June. 1970u. Are Americans doomed? McCalls, July. 1970v. The population crisis: Where we stand. Bulletin, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago. October. 1970w. Man is the endangered species. National Wildlife, April-May, 8:3,pp. 38-39. 1970x. An environmental crisis. Plain Truth, June-July. 1970y. We're standing on the edge of the earth. National Wildlife, 8:6, p. l6. 1970z. The people problem. Saturday Review, July 4, pp. 42-43. (with J.P. Holdren.) 1970aa. Hidden effects of overpopulation. Saturday Review, August l, p. 52. (with J.P. Holdren). 1970bb. Why do people move? Saturday Review, Sept. 5, p. 5l. (with J.P. Holdren). 1970cc. Deceptive birth rates. Saturday Review, October 3, p. 58. (with J.P. Holdren). 1970dd. Dodging the crisis. Saturday Review, November 7, p. 73. (with J.P. Holdren). 1970ee. Co-evolutionary race. Saturday Review, December 5, p. 66. (with J.P. Holdren). 1970ff. Hearst Newspaper articles: l. You can't win -- or can you? 1970gg. Hearst Newspaper articles: 2. A food glut in our future? 1970hh. Hearst NewspaperArticles: 3. Pollute now-- pay later. 1970ii. Ecology and the war on hunger. War on Hunger, A.I.D., Washington, D.C., December. 1970jj. Overpopulation and the potential for ecocide. Center Magazine. Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, Santa Barbara, CA. (with J.P. Holdren). 1970kk. (Introduction) Silent Spring, by Rachel Carson. Fawcett Publications, New York. 1970ll. All that empty space. TWA Ambassador, November. 1970mm. (Introduction) "Population Control" through Nuclear Pollution, by J. Gofman and A. Tamplin. Nelson-Hall, Chicago. 1970nn. (Introduction) Born to Starve, by Joseph Tydings. William Morrow, New York. 1970oo. Adult behavior and population structure in Erebia epipsodea. Ecology, 5l:880-886. (with P. Brussard). 1970pp. The population bomb. New York Times, Op-ed page, November 4. 1970qq. The destruction of Indochina. Stanford Biology Study Group. 9 pp. 1970rr. Lassa Fever: 1970-1972. Australian Natural History, December, pp. 437-441. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1971a. Who makes the babies? Saturday Review, February 6, p. 68. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971b. Demographic transition. Saturday Review, March 6, p. 56. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971c. The heat barrier. Saturday Review, April, p.6l. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971d. The "Lost Genius" Debate. Saturday Review, May l, p. 6l. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971e. The negative animal. Saturday Review, June 5, p. 52. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971f. Technology for the poor. Saturday Review, July 3, pp. 46-47. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971g. The energy crisis. Saturday Review, August 7, p. 42. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971h. Abortion and morality. Saturday Review, Sept. 4, p. 58. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971i. Hearst Newspaper Articles: 4. Fear of the aged. 1971j. Hearst Newspaper Articles: 5. Can we wait for proof? 1971k. Hearst Newspaper Articles: 6. The lessons of the SST. 1971l. Primer on population growth and ecology. Part I of Population Monograph. Medcom, Oct. (with R.L. Harriman). 1971m. Population growth and the future of man. The l971 Compton Yearbook, Encyclopedia Brittanica. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1971n. Population crisis and plans to limit population growth. 1971 Brittanica Book of the Year. Encyclopedia Brittanica, Chicago. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1971o. How to be a Survivor: A Plan to Save Spaceship Earth. Ballantine Books, Inc., New York. (with R.L. Harriman). 1971q. Article untitled. National Parks Guide, 5th ed. Rand-McNally, N.Y. 1971r. (Introduction) Man and the environment, by Wesley Jackson. Ballantine Books, N.Y. 1971s. Global Ecology: Readings Toward a Rational Strategy for Man. Harcourt, Brace and Jovanovitch, N.Y. (editor, with J.P. Holdren). 1971t. The effects of crowding on human task performance. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, l:l,7-25. (with J.L. Freedman). 1971u. Population, crowding and human behavior. New Scientist and Science Journal, April l. (with J.L. Freedman). 1971v. Impact of population growth. Science, 171:1212-1217. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971w. Butterfly feeding on Lycopsid. Science, 172:1341-1342. (with M.C. Singer). 1971x. The Population Bomb. Ballantine Books, N.Y. Revised edition. 1971y. The gypsy moth backlash. Saturday Review, October 2, p. 71. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971z. Neither Marx nor Malthus. Saturday Review, November 6, p. 88. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971aa. Starvation as a policy. Saturday Review, December 4, p. 91. (with J.P .Holdren). 1971bb. An inventory of disaster. In: Ecocide...and Thoughts Survival, Clifton Fadiman and Jean White, eds., White, Center for Study of Democratic Institutions. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971cc. The population crisis: Where we stand. In: Population Environment and People, Noel Hinriche, ed. The Council on Population and Environment. McGraw-Hill Paperbacks, N.Y. 1971dd. Population and environment. In: The American Population Debate, Daniel Callahan, ed. Anchor Books, Doubleday, Garden City. (with J.P. Holdren). 1971ee. The impact of crowding on human behavior. The New York Times, September 11. (with J.L. Freedman). 1971ff. (Foreword) Voyages: Scenarios for a Ship Called Earth, Robert Sauer,ed. Ballantine Books, N.Y. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1971gg. An expanded concept of "species diversity". Notulae Naturae, 439:1-6, October 12. (with J.A. Hendrickson, Jr). 1971hh. Man and the Ecosphere. (Readings from Scientific American). W.H. Freeman and Co., San Francisco. (with J.P. Holdren and R.W. Holm). 1972a. Weather and the "regulation" of subalpine populations. Ecology, 53:243-247. (with D.E. Breedlove, P.F. Brussard and M.A. Sharpe). 1972b. People in the machinery. Saturday Review, January 1, p. 71. 1972c. Overpopulated Europe. London Times, April 12. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1972d. Population, Resources, Environment: Issues in Human Ecology. W.H. Freeman and Co., San Francisco. Revised edition. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1972e. Warnings. In: Environmental Solutions, Nicholas Pole, ed. Cambridge University Conservation Society, "EcoPublications", Cambridge, England. 1972f. The pie is finite. Family Planning, April, pp. 3-7. 1972g. (Editorial) Is the tide turning? BioScience, 22:277. 1972h. The case against the case against hysteria. The Times, (London), June 26. (with J.P. Holdren). 1972i. One dimensional ecology. Science and Public Affairs (Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists), May. (with J.P. Holdren). 1972j. One-dimensional ecology revisited: a rejoinder. Science and Public Affairs (Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists), June. 1972:42-45. (with J.P. Holdren). 1972k. One-dimensional ecology (The closing circle). Environment, 14(3) April. (with J.P. Holdren). 1972l. "If all Chinese had wheels." New York Times, March 16. (with Dennis Pirages). 1972m. The hysteria against the case. Arnoldia, Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. September. 1972n. One-dimensional ecology. The Ecologist, August, pp. 11-21. 1972o. The population, resources, environment crisis: Where do we stand now? Conservation, May-July. pp. 1-7. 1972p. Population control. Saturday Evening Post, Fall. 1972q. (Introduction) Symposium: Population and the Law. The Hastings Law Journal, 23:1345-1351. May. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1972r. Coevolution: patterns of legume predation by a lycaenid butterfly. Oecologia, 10:99-104. (with D.E. Breedlove). 1972s. Or is it a live Time Bomb? KansasCity Star, Nov. l9, p. 9D. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1972t. Wing-shape and adult resources in lycaenids. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, 26: 195-197. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1972u. Impact of population growth. In: Population, Resources, and the Environment. 198 Ronald G. Ridker, ed. Vol. III of Commission Research Reports (U.S. Commission on Population Growth and the American Future), Washington, D.C. 1972v. The hysteria against the case. Equilibrium (ZPG Newsletter), January. (reprint from the London Times, see 1972h). 1972w. (Introduction) Blueprint for Survival, by the editors of The Ecologist. Houghton Mifflin, Boston. 1972x. To save the children. In: The World's Children. Summer (Publication of Save the Children Fund, London) (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1973a. Coevolution: heterotypic schooling in Caribbean reef fishes. The American Naturalist, 107:157-160. Janu ary-February. (with A.H. Ehrlich. 1973b. The hysteria against the case. Current Affairs Bulletin, 49:298-306. (with J.P. Holdren). 1973c. Human Ecology: Problems and Solutions. W.H. Freeman and Company, San Francisco. 304 pp. (with A.H. Ehrlich and J.P. Holdren). 1973d. (Review) California Tomorrow Plan, by Alfred Heller. American Scientist, 61:209-210. March-April. 1973e. The ecology of the pollinators and predators of Frasera speciosa. Ecology, 54:81- 91. (with D.E. Breedlove and A.J. Beattie). 1973f. (Introduction) Environment Administration, by Edmundes and Letey. McGraw- Hill, N.Y. 1973g. (Introduction) Make Room, Make Room, by Harry Harrison. Berkeley Publishers, N.Y. 1973h. (Review) World Without Borders, by Lester Brown. Random House. Equilibrium (ZPG Newsletter), April, Vol. 1, No. 2, p. 35-6. 1973i. Introductory Biology. McGraw-Hill, N.Y. (with R.W. Holm and M. Soule). 1973j. A dark age threat. San Francisco Examiner, September 12. 1973k. The population structure and dynamics of a tropical butterfly, Heliconius ethilla. Biotropica, 5(2):69-82. (with L. Gilbert). 1973l. (Editorial) Nature in Focus, Bulletin of the European Information Centre for Nature Conservation, Council of Europe 1973, No. 16:1-2. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1973m. Alkaloid and predation patterns in Colorado lupine populations. Oecologia (Berl.), 13:191-204. (with P. Dolinger, W.L. Fitch and D.E. Breedlove). 1973n. Human Populations and the Global Environment. Prepared for the United Nations Symposium on Population, Resources, and Environment. Stockholm, September 24-October 5. 1973o. The population-resource-environment crisis with special reference to Japan. New Horizons in Population Education, June, pp. 67-75. Tokyo. 1974a. Third World attitudes. Atmospheric Environment, Vol.8. 1974b. How long can the planet support us? International Wildlife, March:April, 4(2):21-23. 1974c. Ark II: Social Response to Environmental Imperatives. Viking Press, New York. (with D.C. Pirages). 1974d. Human population and the global environment. American Scientist, May-June, 62:282-292. (with J.P. Holdren). 1974e. Misconceptions. New York Times Magazine, June 16. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1974f. Ehrlich's guide to the apocalypse: food. The CoEvolution Quarterly, Summer, pp. 2l-4l. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1974g. Man is courting ecological disaster. The Unesco Courier, July-August, pp. 19-25. (with J.P. Holdren). 1974h. Sahel famine. The Stanford Daily, April 26. 1974i. Human population and environmental problems. Environmental Conservation, 1:15-20. 1974j. Biocore. McGraw-Hill, New York. (edited with R.W. Holm and P.C. Hanawalt). 1974k. Evolution. Biocore, Unit 23, pp. 1-32. (with R.W. Holm). 1974l. Process of Evolution. 2nd edition. McGraw-Hill, New York. (with R.W. Holm and D.R. Parnell). 1974m. Plant resources and butterfly habitat selection. Ecology, 55:870-875. (with M. Sharp and D. Parks). 1974n. Ignorance, greed, neglect could starve millions. Los Angeles Times, Sunday, Part VII. 9/8. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1974o. Plowboy interview. The Mother Earth News, No. 28, July, pp. 6-13. 1974p. We could easily destroy the world. Newsweek, September 2, p. 56. 1974q. The End of Affluence: A Blueprint for Your Future. Ballantine Books, New York. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1974r. (Testimony) Subcommittee on science and technology, Senate Commerce Committee. 6/17. (with A.H. Ehrlich). GPO, Washington,D.C. 1974s. Teaching biology to nonmajors. Carnegie Foundation for Advancement of Teaching Conference. 1974-75. 1974t. Adult movements and population structure in Euphydryas editha. Evolution, 28(3):408-415. (with P.F.Brussard and M.C.Singer). 1974u. Editorial (Viewpoint) International Journal of Environmental Studies, 7:1-3. Gordon and Breach, London. 1974v. (Chapter) Between man and environment: The delicate balance. In: Health in a Changing World, P.M. Insel and W.T. Roth, eds. W.H. Freeman, San Francisco. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1975a. Checkerspot butterflies: a historical perspective. Science, 188:221-228. (with R.R. White, M.C. Singer, S.W. McKechnie, L.E. Gilbert). 1975b. How to survive in an age of scarcity. Special Issue #5, Skeptic, pp. 59-61. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1975c. Cheap nuclear power could lead to civilization's end. Los Angeles Times. Tuesday, May 27. 1975d. Starvation: 1975. Penthouse, July 1975. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1975e. An ecologist's perspective on nuclear power. F.A.S.Public Interest Report, 28(5- 6):3-6. 1975f. The population biology of coral reef fishes. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, Fall 1975, vol. 6, pp. 211-247. 1975g. Population genetics of Euphydryas butterflies. I. Genetic variation and the neutrality hypothesis. Genetics, 81:571-594. (with S.W. McKechnie and R.R. White). 1975h. Eight thousand million people by the year 2010? Environmental Conservation, 2(4)241-242. (with J.P. Holdren). 1975i. The benefits of saying yes! Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 31(6):23-51. 1975j. Human population and the global environment. Prepared for the United Nations Symposium on Population Resources and Environment. In: Vol. II, The Population Debate: Dimensions and Perspectives. (Papers of the World Population Conference, Bucharest l974. UN Dept. Economic and Social Affairs, Population Studies, No. 57). U.N., N.Y. 1975k. (Foreword) Island of dreams: environmental crisis in Japan, by N. Huddle and M. Reich. Century Press, N.Y. 1975l. How to survive in an age of scarcity. Skeptic, Special issue No. 5, pp. 59-6l. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1976a. Warning: your leaders may be hazardous to your health. Penthouse, July. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1976b. (Statement) Intercom. Population Reference Bureau. Washington, D.C. April l. 1976c. Papilio xuthus (Papilionidae) in Hawaii. Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society, 30(2):149-50, 12 July. 1976d. (Statement) Senate Foreign Relations Committee, hearings on World Environment-Foreign Policy Issues. Congressional Record, l22(68), May l0. Washington,D.C. 1976e. The world food problem: no room for complacency. Social Science Quarterly, 57(2). (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1976f. (Editorial) Eight thousand million by the year 2000. The Ecologist, 6(4), London. (with J.P. Holdren). 1976g. The structure and genetics of a montane population of the checkerspot butterfly, Chlosyne palla. Oecologia (Berl.) 25:279-289. (with R.D. Schrier, M.J. Cullenward, and R.R. White). 1976h. Biology and Society. McGraw-Hill Book Co. (with R.H. Holm and I.L. Brown). 1976i. (Letter) We must start tithing to American society. The National Observer, Mar. 6. 1977a. The Race Bomb. Quadrangle Books, New York. (with S. Feldman). 1977b. (Editorial) Ecologists, ethics, and the environment. BioScience, 27(4) 239. 1977c. Ecoscience: Population,Resources,Environment. W.H.Freeman, San Francisco. (with A.H. Ehrlich and J.P. Holdren). 1977d. (Review) Racism Revised. The Legacy of Malthus, by Alan Chase. The Sciences, November, pp. 23-27. 1977e. (Foreword) Ground for Concern: Australia's Uranium and Human Survival. Mary Elliott, ed. Friends of the Earth (Australia). Penguin Books. 1977f. The behavior of chaetodontid fishes with special reference to Lorenz's "Poster Coloration" Hypothesis. Jour. Zool. Lond., 183:213-228. (with F.H. Talbot, B.C. Russell, and G.R.V. Anderson). 1977g. The behavior of heterotypic resting schools of juvenile grunts (Pomadasyidae). Marine Biology, pp. 273-280. (with J.C. Ogden). 1977h. (Letter) Reply to Petersen. Social Science Quarterly, vol. 58, no. 2, pp 330-331. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1977i. El desdesarrollo como alternativa. Troquel, Arte-Ciencia No. 14, Sept. Costa Rica. 1977j. 8,000,000,000 de habitates? Nunca Llegaremos AEsa Cifra. Excelsior (Costa Rica), Dec 17. (with J.P. Holdren). 1978a. (Review) The Limits of Altruism. An Ecologist's View of Survival, by Garrett Hardin. Human Nature, Vol. 1, no. 3, 18-21. March. 1978b. The troubled world our children will inherit. Parents Magazine, May, p. 29, 30, 34, 40. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1978c. (Review) Sociopolitical aspects of Biology. Biology as a Social Weapon, Ann Arbor Science for the People Editorial Collective, eds. Burgess Publishing, Minneapolis. BioScience, Vol. 28, No. 6, p. 404. 1978d. ZPG: Where to now? ZPG National Reporter, May, Vol. l0, No. 4. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1978e. The Population Bomb. (Revised) May. Twelfth Printing. Ballantine, N.Y. 1978f. (Review) Population Biology: Bicentennial Assessment. Changing Scenes in Natural Sciences, 1776-1976. Science, 201:898-899. 1978g. (Review) Steady State Economics, by Herman E. Daly. Human Nature. 1(8):20-24. 1978h. Reproductive strategies in the butterflies: I. Mating frequency, plugging, and egg number. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society, vol. 51, no. 4, pp. 666- 697. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1978i. Coevolution and pest control. The Mother Earth News, March-April, pp. 118- 149. (with A. H. Ehrlich). 1978j. Humanity at the crossroads. The Stanford Magazine, vol. 6, no. 1, pp. 2l:23. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1978k. Is it safe to live near a nuclear power plant? The Mother Earth News, May-June, pp. 154-155. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1978l. Is it safe to live near a nuclear power plant? (Part Two). The Mother Earth News, July-August, pp. 116-117. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1978m. Hope for the tropical forests? The Mother Earth News, September-October, pp. 110-111. (with A.H. Ehrlich). l978n. Introduction to Insect Biology and Diversity. McGraw-Hill, N.Y. (with H. Daly 283 and J. Doyen). 1978o. Butterflies of Jasper Ridge. The Sciences, 18:9, 10-l, 31-32. 1978p. Effects of pesticides on natural systems. In: New Frontiers of Pest Management (Conference Proceedings, Dec. l977). California Legislature, Sacramento, CA., pp. 20-24. 1978q. Recombinant DNA, P.R. Ehrlich, and Friends of the Earth. CoEvolution Quarterly, Spring. (Letter for FOE by P.R. Ehrlich and reply). pp. 24-27. 1978r. The problem of atomic waste (Part One). The Mother Earth News, Nov./Dec., pp. l37-l38. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1978s. Comments on Astropollution. CoEvolution,Summer 6:1, (with A. H. Ehrlich). 1978t. (Preface) The Bug Bomb by R. van den Bosch. Doubleday, N.Y. 1978u. The Race Bomb. Ballantine Books, N.Y. Paperback edition. (with S. Feldman). 1979a. The problem of atomic waste (Part Two). The Mother Earth News, Jan.-Feb., pp. 18-129. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979b. B chromosome variation in E. colon (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae). Chromosoma (Berl.) 73, 263-274. (with F. Kay Pearse). 1979c. (Letter) Energy vs. ecology. Fortune, Dec. l7, p. ll6. 1979d. Endocyclic selection in Natrix. American Naturalist, 114:5, p. 747. (with J. Camin). 1979e. (Review) Paul R. Ehrlich considers Silent Spring. Bulletin of the Atomic 296 Scientists, 35:8, Oct., pp.34-36. 1979f. How to cut your cancer risks! The Mother EarthNews, March-April, pp. 128- 129. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979g. The snail darter and us. The Mother Earth News, May-June, pp. 128-129. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979h. The "Inhaber Report" (Part One). The Mother Earth News, July-August, pp. 116- 117. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979i International year of NO child? Environmental Conservation, Vol.6, #1, pp. 1-2. Spring. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979j. The "Inhaber Report" (Part Two). The Mother Earth News, Sept.-Oct., pp. 116- 117. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979k. Butterflies of Jasper Ridge. The Coevolution Quarterly, Summer, pp. 50-55. 1979l. (Essay) What happened to the population bomb? Human Nature, January, pp. 88-92. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979m. The population bomb revisited. People, Vol.6, no. 2, pp. 21-24. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979n. Joseph H. Camin. Journal Kans. Ent. Soc., 52:4, 835-6. 1979o. The ecology and population genetics of an alpine checkerspot butterfly Euphydryas anicia. Oecologia, 38:1-12. (with M.J. Cullenward, R.R. White and C.E. Holdren). 1979p. The Golden Door: International Migration, Mexico, and the United States. Ballantine Books, N.Y. (with L. Bilderback and A.H. Ehrlich). 1979q. (Foreword) Reef Fishes of the Sea of Cortez by Donald A. Thomson, L.T. Findley and A.N. Kerstitch. John Wiley, N.Y. 1979r. Population dynamics of the checkerspot butterfly, Euphydryas editha. Population Ecology, Fortschr. Zool., No. 25, 2/3, pp. 53-60. (with M.C. Singer). 1979s. The migration menace. The Mother Earth News, Nov.- Dec., pp. l48-149. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1979t. The "rivet-poppers" of our Planet's ecosystems. New York Times, May 18, op-ed page. 1979u. An ecologist looks at some determinants of the future. Symposium, Prospect 2000. Western Australian Division, ANZAAS, May, 1979. 1980a. Colorado checkerspot butterflies: isolation, neutrality and the biospecies. American Naturalist, 115:3, 328- 341. (with R.R. White). 1980b. Immigration in the future. The Mother Earth News, Jan/Feb, pp. l50-l5l. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1980c. Variety is the key to life. Technology Review, Vol. 82, no. 5, March-April, pp. 58-68. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass. 1980d. The strategy of conservation, l980-2000. Chapter 19, In: Conservation Biology: an evolutionary-ecological perspective. Michael Soule and Bruce Wilcox, eds. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Mass. pp. 329-344. 1980e. The lessons of Three Mile Island. The Mother Earth News, Mar/Apr, pp. 148- 149. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1980f. The Greeks and Romans did it, Too! The Mother Earth News, May/June, pp. 148- 149. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1980g. Environmental controls on the seasonality of a drought deciduous shrub, Diplacus aurantiacus and its predator, the checkerspot butterfly Euphydryas chalcedona. Oecologia (Berl.), 45, 143-146. (with H.A. Mooney, D.E. Lincoln, and K.S. Williams). 1980h. A resource down the river. The Mother Earth News, July/August, pp. 136-137. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1980i. (Letter) Response to "Resources, population, environment: an oversupply of false bad news," by J.L. Simon. Science, 210:1296-1301. (with J.P. Holdren and A.H. Ehrlich). 1980j. Extinction, reduction, stability and increase: the responses of checkerspot butterfly (Euphydryas) populations to the California Drought. Oecologia (Berl.)46, 101-15. (with D.D. Murphy, M.C. Singer, C.B. Sherwood, R.R. White, and I.L. Brown). 1980k. Two California checkerspot butterfly subspecies: One new, one on the verge of extinction. Jour. Lep. Soc., 34:316-320. (with D.D. Murphy). 1980l. The population biology of the checkerspot butterfly, Euphydryas chalcedona. The structure of the Jasper Ridge Colony. Oecologia (Berl.)47, 239-251. (with I.L. Brown). 1980m. The threat of nuclear proliferation. The Mother Earth News, Sept/Oct, pp. 142- 143. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1980n. Energy: there ain't no free lunch. The Mother Earth News, Nov./Dec., pp. 142- 143. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 198la. Energy: Holdren's principle and Lovins' path. The Mother Earth News, Jan/Feb., pp. 148-149. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981b. Extinction: it should concern us all. The Mother Earth News, Mar/Apr, pp. 154- 155. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981c. An ecologist looks at some determinants of the future. In: Project 2000: A Conference on the Future. S.T. Waddell, ed. Australia and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science, Perth, W. Australia. pp. l94-l99. 1981d. Survivors envy the dead. In: The Book of Predictions, D. Wallechinsky et al., eds. Bantam Books, N.Y. p.128. 1981e. Environmental disruption: Implications for the social sciences. And An economist in wonderland. Social Science Quarterly, 62:l, March. pp. 7-22; 44- 49. 1981f. Extinction: The Causes and Consequences of the Disappearance of Species. Random House, Inc., N.Y. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981g. Community structure of coral reef fishes. American Naturalist, 117(4):476-495. (with G.R.V. Anderson, A.H. Ehrlich, J.R. Roughgarden, B.C. Russell, and F.H. Talbot). l98lh. The economics of extinction. Mother Earth News, May/June, 144:145. (with A. H. Ehrlich) 1981i. The rivet poppers. Not Man Apart, II(5):l5. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1981j. Extinction or a strategy of conservation. Bull. At. Sci., June/July, 25-30. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1981k. If butterflies disappear -- disaster. New York Times, Op-ed page, May 30. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981l. Other species: aesthetics, interest, and ethics. The Mother Earth News, Jul/Aug, pp. 140-141. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981m. The politics of extinction. Bull. At. Sci., May, 26-30. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981n. Why butterflies? The Amicus Journal, 2(4):12:116. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981o. (Foreword) In: David Phillips, ed., The Condor Question, Friends of the Earth, pub. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981p. (Letter) Battle over the Butte? Time, July 20, p. 4. 198lq. Long range dispersal in Checkerspot butterflies: Transplant experiments with E. gillettii, Oecologia 50:125- 129. (with C.E. Holdren) 1981r. Temporal and spatial variability in interaction between the checkerspot butterfly E. chalcedona and its principal food source, the California shrub, Diplacus aurant iacus. Oecologia 50:195-198. (with H.A. Mooney, K.S. Williams, and D.E. Lincoln) 1981s. The population biology of checkerspot butterflies (Euphydryas). Biologisches Zentralblatt l00:6l3-629. (with D.D. Murphy) 1981t. Diversity and the steady state. In: Quest for a sustainable society, James C. Coomer, ed. Pergamon Press, NY. 1981u. (Editorial) Dangers of uninformed optimism. Environmental Conservation, Fall. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1981v. Ecological impact of nuclear war. The Mother Earth News, Sept/Oct, pp:142- 143. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981w. (Review) Overshoot: Ecological Basis of Revolutionary Change, by W.R. Catton, Jr. American Scientist 69(5):559. l98lx. (Letter) Conservation of tropical forests. Science 213:1314. (with Eisner, Meinwald, et al.) l98ly. (Letter) To Friends of the Earth. In: The DNA Story, by J.D. Watson and J. Tooze, W.H. Freeman, San Francisco, pp. 269-270. l98lz. An ecologist standing up among seated social scientists. CoEvolution Quarterly, Fall, pp. 24-35. l98laa. Conservatives and conservation. The Mother Earth News, Nov/Dec, pp. 148-9. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1981bb. What happened to the Population Bomb? In: The Social World, Ian Robertson, ed. Worth Publishers, Inc. N.Y. (with Anne H. Ehrlich) 1981cc. "Silent spring" -- Um livro para todas as epocas, Fundacao Brasileira para a Conservacao da Natureza, 16:62-66. 1982. Extinction. The Museum of California, Jan/Feb, pp.7-11, The Oakland Museum, Oakland, California. 1982a. Should we worry about the extinction of other species? Lindbergh Lecture Series, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass. (Lecture given in l980, pub. l982) 1982b. Brazil: Hope and horror. The Mother Earth News, Jan/Feb, pp. 144-145. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1982c. The Genetic Variability of Crops. The Mother Earth News, Mar/Apr, pp. 144- 145. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1982d. Preserving genetic diversity: Seed banks. The Mother Earth News, May/June, pp. 146-147. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1982e. Extinction: before it's too late. Science Teacher, April, pp. 20-23. 1982f. Human carrying capacity, extinctions, and nature reserves. BioScience, 32(5): 33l-333. 1982g. That ain't no way to treat a lady. Kansas Alumni, Spring, pp. 9-l5. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1982h. Space age cargo cult. Defenders of Wildlife, 57(1):2-5.(with A.H. Ehrlich) 1982i. Coevolution of the checkerspot butterfly Euphydryas chalcedona and its larval food plant Diplacus aurantiacus: Larval response to protein and leaf resin. Oecologia (Berl.) 52:2l6-223. (with D.E. Lincoln, T.S.Newton, and K.S. Williams) 1982j. Ecological determinants of food plant choice in the checkerspot butterfly Euphydryas editha in Colorado. Oecologia (Berl.) 52:4l7-423. (with Cheryl E. Holdren). 1982k. (Foreword) Understanding the Environment, by K.E.F. Watt, Allyn and Bacon, Boston. 1982l. (Review) World Population and Human Values: A New Reality, by J. Salk and J. Salk, Bull. At. Sci., May 2, pp. 53-54. 1982m. Butterfly retreat; loss of habitat imperils a growing number of species, Defenders, April, pp. 21-27. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1982n. Social behavior of butterfly and surgeonfishes on coral reefs: some mirror experiments, Oecologia, 54:138-140. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1982o. That's right -- you should check it for yourself, Social Sciences Quarterly, 63(2):385-387. 1982p. Disarmament: the lesser risk, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 38(6):7-8. 1982q. Coevolution, drugs, and pest control. Bios. 53:134-138. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1982r. Butterfly nomenclature: a critique. J. Res. Lepid.. 20: 1-11. (with D.D. Murphy). 1982s. Lizard predation on tropical butterflies. J. Lepidop. Soc. 36(2):148-152 (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1982t. (Letter) Ecological reservations. New Scientist. 18 November, p. 459. 1982u. Captive breeding: A solution to the extinction problem? The Mother Earth News, July/August, pp. 144-145. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1982v. Saving diversity: a question of habitat. The Mother Earth News, September/October, pp. 150-151. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1982w. Poison from below. The Mother Earth News, November/December, pp. l46-l47. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1982x. Resources, extinctions, and the limits to growth. The Manville Papers. 2(2):1-3. Rockford College. Rockford, Il. 1983a. (Review). The World Environment 1972-1982: A Report by the United Nations Environment Programme. M. W. Holdgate, M. Kassas, and G. F. White, (eds.). BioScience. 33(3):202. 1983b. (Review). Down to Earth: Environment and Human Needs. E.P. Eckholm. BioScience. 33(3):202. 1983c. Can it really be fifteen years? ZPG Reporter. Jan/Feb:1 382. 1983d. The role of adult feeding in egg production and population dynamics of the checkerspot butterfly Euphydryas editha. Oecologia. 56:257-263. (with D.D. Murphy and A.E. Launer). 1983e. The coevolution of Euphydryas chalcedona butterflies and their larval host plants. I. Larval feeding behavior and host plant chemistry. Oecologia. 56:3223-329. (with K.S. Williams and D.E. Lincoln). 1983f. The coevolution of Euphydryas chalcedona butterflies and their larval host plants. II. Maternal and host plant effects on larval growth, development, and food-use efficiency. Oecologia 56:330-335. (K.S. Williams and D.E. Lincoln). 1983g. Extinction, substitution, and ecosystem services. BioScience 33(4):248-254. (with H.A. Mooney). 1983h. Why should we care about evolution? Pacific Discovery. 36(2):11-15. 1983i. (Editorial) Understanding the stakes of nuclear war. San Jose Mercury. April 3. p. 7D.
1983j. Poison from above. Mother Earth News. Jan-Feb. pp. 150-151. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983k. Population: where we stand now. Mother Earth News. March-April. pp. 146-147. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983l. Nomenclature, taxonomy and evolution. J. Res. Lep. 20(4):199-204. (with D.D. Murphy).
1983m. (Editorial). ZPG Reporter. 15(2):3.
1983n. China's population crisis. Mother Earth News. May-June. pp. 146-147. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983o. China: On the brink. Mother Earth News. July-August. pp. 146-147. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983p. Population: Anatomy of a crisis. Harvard International Review. May-June. pp. 11-14. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983q. (Review). D.P. Eckholm. Down to Earth: Environment and Human Needs. Q. Rev. Biology. 58:295-296.
1983r. Emergence patterns in male butterflies: A hypothesis and a test. Theoretical Population Biology. 23:363-379. (with Y. Iwasa, F.J. Odendaal, D.D. Murphy, and A.E. Launer).
1983s. (Letter). People. 10(3):40.
1983t. (Review). G. Hardin, Naked Emperors: Essays of a Taboo Stalker. Technology Review. 86(6):71-72.
1983u. Summer butterflies in Dinosaur National Monument. J. Lepidop. Soc. 37(1):91- 92.
1983v. Japan: The Miner's Canary. The Mother Earth News. Sept.-Oct. pp. 140-141. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983w. (Review) Save Thermosphaeroma thermophilum! S.M. Wells, R. M. Pyle, and N.M. Collins, The IUCN Invertebrate Red Data Book and L. Line and L. and M. Milne, The Audubon Society Book of Insects. Natural History. October, 92(10):77-83.
1983x. Designs for a sane world. 1st Bienneal Conference On the Fate of the Earth. New York. Oct.19-21,1982. pp. 103-112.
1983y. After nuclear war. The Mother Earth News. Nov.-Dec. pp. 140-141. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983z. (Editorial) Old myths die hard! Environmental Conservation. 10(2):89-90. (with A.H. Ehrlich).
1983aa. When the light is put away: Ecological effects of nuclear war. In: The Counterfeit Ark: Crisis Relocation for Nuclear War. J. Leaning and L. Keyes, eds. Ballinger, Cambridge, MA.
1983bb. (Editorial) See the effects of nuclear war. Be emotional. New York Times. Nov. 408 20,1983.
1983cc. Butterflies and biospecies. J. Res. Lepid. 21(4):219-225.
1983dd. The Cissia confusa species-group in Costa Rica and Trinidad (Lepidoptera: Satyrinae). Zool. J. Linnean Society 79:101-119. (with M.C. Singer and P. J. DeVries).
1983ee. Butterfly nomenclature, stability, and the role of obligatory categories. S. Zool.. 32:451-453. (with D.D. Murphy).
1983ff. (Chapter)1984: Population and environment. Nineteen Eighty-Four. P. Stansky (ed.). pp. 49-55. Portable Stanford. Stanford University Press.
1983gg. (Chapter) Genetics and the extinction of butterfly populations. In: Genetics and Conservation: A Reference for Managing Wild Animal and Plant Populations. C. M. SchonewaldCox, S. M. Chambers, B. MacBryde, and L. Thomas eds., Benjamin/Cummings. pp. 152-163.
1983hh. Long-term biological consequences of nuclear war. Science. 222(4630):1293- 1300. (Senior author with 19 contributors). 1983ii. A note on the biosystematics of the Euphydryas of central Utah. Utahensis 3(3):53-54. (with D.D. Murphy).
1983jj. Crows, bobs, tits, elfs, and pixies: The phoney "common name" phenomenon. J. Res. Lepid. 22(2): 154-158. (with D.D. Murphy).
1983kk. Speech to the National Press Club, Oct. 24, Washington, D.C. ZPG Reporter. 15(5):2,4.
1984a. No springtime for Earth. Newsday. Sunday, Jan. 22. pp. 4179-10.
1984b. Thoughts on the design of a sane world: part 1. The Mother Earth News, Jan- Feb. pp. 146-147. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1984c. North America after the war. Natural History. 93(3): 4-8. 1984d. Discovering the ecology of nuclear war. Amicus. 5(3): 42020-30. 1984e. Thoughts on the design of a sane world: part 2. The Mother Earth News, March- April. pp. 138-139. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1984f. (Review) D. J. Futuyma, ed. Coevolution. Evolution. 38(1):226-227. 1984g. (Editorial) Manchester Guardian. March 15. P. 15. (with A. H. Ehrlich) 1984h. Biosystematics of the Euphydryas of the Central Great Basin with the description of a new subspecies. J. Res. Lepid.. 22(4):254-261 (with D.D. Murphy). 1984i. Thoughts on the design of a sane world: part 3. The Mother Earth News, May- June, pp. 142-143. (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1984j. Nectar sources as a determinant of oviposition host species in Euphydryas chalcedona. Oecologia 62: 269- 271. (with D.D. Murphy and M.S. Menninger). 1984k. Nuclear winter update for Coevolution Quarterly. CoEvolution Quarterly, Summer, p. 94 (accompanys reprint of Amicus Article). 1984l. On butterfly taxonomy. J. Res. Lepid. 23(1):19-34 (with D.D. Murphy). 1984m. Evolution and ecoscience. The Mother Earth News. July-August, pp. 142-143. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1984n. The life history and ecology of Euphydryas gilletti Barnes (Nymphalidae). J. Lepid. Soc.. 38(1): 1-12. (with E.H. Williams and C.E. Holdren). 1984o. The seasonal dynamics of leaf resin, nitrogen, and herbivore damage in . Eriodictyon californicum and their parallels in Diplacus aurantiacus. Oecologia 61:398- 402. (with N.D. Johnson, C.C. Chu, and H.A. Mooney). 1984p. (Foreword). The Pesticide Conspiracy by R. van den Bosch. Japanese edition. 1984q. Gorillas and people. The Mother Earth News. Sept.- Oct., pp. 142-144 (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1984r. Letter home: On safari out of California. California Magazine. Sept. 4,1984. 1984s. (Address) U.S. Population Policy: Alone in Mexico City. Commonwealth. 58(37): 303-309. The Commonwealth Club, San Francisco, August 30, 1984. 1984t. Citation classic -- butterflies and plants: A study in coevolution. Evolution 18:586-608, 1964. Current Contents 15(37):16. 1984u. The Cold and The Dark: The World After Nuclear War. W.W. Norton, N.Y.1984 (with C. Sagan, D. Kennedy, W.O. Roberts). 1984v. Can sex ratio be defined or determined? The case of a populatin of checkerspot butterflies. Amer. Natur. 124(4):527-539. (with A. E. Launer and D. D. Murphy). 1984w. The structure and dynamics of butterfly populations. In: R.I. Vane-Wright and P.R. Ackery, eds., The Biology of Butterflies. Symposium British Ent. Soc. 11:25-40. 1984x. (Review) Biophila: The Human Bond to Other Species. by E. O. Wilson. Natural History. Nov. 93:92-94. 1984y. (Introduction to chapter on evolution) Gaia: An Atlas of Planet Management. Norman Myers, ed., Doubleday, N.Y., p. 138. 1984z. 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A direct assessment of the role of genetic drift in determining allele frequency variation in populations of Euphydryas editha. Genetics. 110:495-511. (with L.E. Mueller, D.D. Murphy, and B.A. Wilcox) 1985j. Human ecology for introductory biology courses: An overview. Science as a Way of Knowing. American Zoologist, 25:379-394. 1985k. The concept of human ecology: A personal view. IUCN Bulletin, 16:60-61. 1985l. Grazing ecosystems -- From theory to practice. The Mother Earth News. July- August. 94:110-111. 1985m. Genetic distances and the taxonomy of checkerspot butterflies (Nymphalidae: Nymphalinae). J. Kansas Ent. 58:403- 412. (with P.F. Brussard, D.D. Murphy, B.A. Wilcox, and J. Wright). 1985n. Audubon. Mother Earth News, September-October. 95:118-120. (with A. H. Ehrlich). 1985o. Extinction: The implications of the loss of our biological heritage. 3rd Keith Roby Memorial Lecture in Community Science. Murdoch University, October 2,1985. 1985p. Humankind's war against Homo sapiens. 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Biodiversity & the public lands; Habitats in crisis, Why we should care about the loss of species. Wilderness. Spring: 12-15. 1987e. (Letter) How many creatures? BioScience. April Vol. 37, ,4: 246 (with A.H. Ehrlich, Peter Vitousek and Pamela Matson). 1987f. (Letter) Marshall's article on nuclear winter overlooks several critical points. Science. February 20:832 (with A.H. Ehrlich and Harold Mooney). 1987g. Why do people starve? The Amicus Journal. Spring Vol. 9, No. 2:42-47 (with A.H. Ehrlich) 1987h. The Science of Ecology. MacMillan, New York. (with J. Roughgarden). 1987i. Why the Club of Earth? Trends in Ecology & Evolution. May, Vol. 2, No.5(11). 1987j. Conservation lessons from long-term studies of checkerspot butterflies. Conservation Biology. Vol. 1, No. 2: 122-131 (with D.D. Murphy). 1987k. Effects of chemical fertilization of Diplacus aurantiaus on the development and persistence of the postdia pause larvae of its lepidopteran herbivore Euphydryas chalcedona. 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Wilson (ed.), Biodiversity, pp. 21-27, National Academy Press, Washington, D.C. 1988f. The Birder's Handbook: A Field Guide to the Natural History of North American Birds. Simon and Schuster, New York. (with David S. Dobkin, and Darryl Wheye). 1988g. Emergence patterns in male checkerspot butterflies: Testing theory in the field. Theor. Pop. Biol., 33:102-113. (with J.F. Baughman and D.D. Murphy). 1988h. (Review) The Preservation of Species: The Value of Biological Diversity, by B.G. Norton. BioScience. 38:424-425. 1988i. Population structure in a hilltopping butterfly. Oecologia, 75:593-600. (with J.F. Baughman and D.D. Murphy). 1988j. Plant chemistry and host range in insect herbivores. Ecology. 69:908-909. (with D.D. Murphy). 1988k. Winged warning. Sierra. September/October 1988. pp. 57-61. 1988l. Scrub jay predation on starlings and swallows: Attack and interspecific defense. The Condor. 90:503-505. (with J.F. McLaughlin). 1988m. World population crisis. Imprint. Vol. V, No. 4, Fall 1988. James Ford Bell Museum of Natural History, Univ. of Minn. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1988n. Islands in the desert. Natural History. 97:10, October 1988, pp. 59-64. (with D.D. Murphy and B.A. Wilcox). 1988o. Hilltopping checkerspot butterflies revisited. The American Naturalist. l32(3):460-461. September 1988. (with D. Wheye). 1988p. Distribution of the bay checkerspot butterfly, Euphydryas editha bayensis: evidence for a metapopulation model. The American Naturalist. 132(3):360- 382. (with S. Harrison and D.D. Murphy). 1988q. Red-naped Sapsuckers feeding at willows: Possible keystone herbivores. American Birds. Vol. 42, No. 3, Fall 1988. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1988r. Population, plenty, and poverty. National Geographic. Vol. 174, No.6, December 1988, pp.914-945. (with A.H. Ehrlich). 1988s. The environmental dimensions of national security. The Stanford Institute for Population and Resource Studies, Paper No. 0013. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1988u. The limits to substitution: Meta-resource depletion and new economic-ecological paradigm. The Stanford Institute for Population and Resource Studies, Paper No. 0014. 1988v. Speaking out on overpopulation. Issues in Science and Technology. Winter 1988- 1989. Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 36-37. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1989aa. New World/New Mind: Moving Toward Conscious Evolution. Doubleday, New York. (with Robert Ornstein). 1989a. Human community needs to come to grips with slow-motion crises. Los Angeles Times. January 17, 1989. 1989b. (Chapter) Populations of people and other living things. In: Earth `88, Changing Geographic Perspectives, National Geographic Society. 1988. pp.302-315. 1989c. How the rich can save the poor and themselves: Lessons from the global warming. The Stanford Institute for Population and Resources Studies, Paper No. 0015. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1989d. Our Earth is past the point of no return. Newsday. Monday, Feb. 6, 1989. 1989e. 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Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1989. pp. 553-562. 1989w. Global change and carrying capacity: Implications for life on earth. In: R. Defries and T. Malone (eds.), Global Change and our Common Future, Papers from a Forum. National Research Council, 1989. pp.19-27. (with G. Daily, A. Ehrlich, P. Matson, P. Vitousek). 1989x. World's grain reserves: Lester Brown is right. The Washington Post. Oct. 28, 1989. p. A-22. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1989y. Sex and violence in your own back yard. Copley News Service, "Outdoor Life." Oct. 4, 1989. (with Darryl Wheye). 1989z. Tomorrow's world: Why saving biodiversity is today's priority. World Birdwatch. Vol. 10, No. 2. April-June 1988. pp.6-7, 9. 1989aa. Intelligent planning for safety. Social Science and Modern Society. Vol. 27, No. 2. Nov/Dec. 1989. pp. 15- 16. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1989bb. The mission of AIBS. BioScience. Vol 39, No. 11. Dec. 1989. p. 810. 1989cc. Preface. Environmental Education Guidelines for Washington Schools. Division of Instructional Programs and Services, Olympia, Washington. Sept. 1988. p. vii. 1989dd. The Environmental dimensions of national security. Proceedings of the Thirty- eighth Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs. "Global Problems and Common Security," Dagomys, USSR. 29 August - 3 September l988. pp. 443- 455. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). Also published in Global Problems and Common Security: Annals of Pubwash 1988. J. Rotblat and V.I. Goldanskii (Eds.) Springer-Verlag, New York, 1989. pp.180-190. 1989ee. Waterfowl, wetlands, and global warming. California Waterfowl. Winter 1989. pp. 28-29. (with Thomas Sisk and Gretchen Daily). 1989ff. Too many rich folks. Populi. Vol. 16, No. 3, Sept. 1989. pp. 20-29. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1989gg. Population and environment. Environmental Awareness. Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989.pp. 107-109 1990a. Earth: How we can save it. Greenpeace. Vol. 15, No. l. January/February 1990. pp.4-5. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990b. The population explosion: Why isn't everyone as scared as we are? The Amicus Journal. Vol. 12, No. 1., Winter 1990. pp. 22-29. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990c. Thinking about our environmental future. EPA Journal. Vol. 16, No. 1, Jan./Feb.1990. pp. 40-42. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990d. Birding for fun: Enjoying being a non-expert. American Birds. 43:5, Winter 1989. pp. 1249-1250. 1990e. Growing, growing, gone. Sierra. March/April 1990. pp. 36-40. (with Anne H.Ehrlich). 1990f. The Population Explosion. Simon and Schuster, NewYork. (with Anne H.Ehrlich). 1990g. EcoVoice - Earth Day 1990. Buzzworm: The Enrivonmental Journal. Vol. II, No. 2, Mar/Apr. pp. 14-15. 1990h. Don't forget the big picture. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. Vol. 9, No. 3, 1990. pp. 249-251. 1990i. Carbon dioxide and the human predicament: An overview. On Global Warming, Proceedings of the First Presiden tial Symposium on World Issues, John Cairns, Jr., and Paul F. Zweifel (eds.). Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Sept.1989. pp. 5-11. 1990j. (Review). Global Warming: Entering the Greenhouse Century by Stephen H. Schneider. BioScience. 40:305. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990k. One potentially lethal disease. Los Angeles Times. April 4, 1990. p. B-7. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990l. The Earth's own day: Our last chance. Newsday. April 15, 1990. p. 5. 1990m. Birding for fun: Garbage birds. American Birds. 44:1, Spring 1990. pp. 7-8. 1990n. (Chapter) Extinction: Life in peril. In: Suzanne Head and Robert Heinzman (eds.), Lessons of the Rainforest. Sierra Club Books,1990. pp. 95-105. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990o. AIBS Task Force for the '90s. BioScience. July/August 1990, 40:7, p. 527. 1990p. Birding for fun: People vs. birds. American Birds. 44:2, Summer 1990. pp.193-196. 1990q. Habitats in crisis: Why we should care about the loss of species. Forest Ecology and Management. 35 (1990), pp. 5-11. Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands. 1990r. (Introduction) Living in the world of nuke. In: Nuke II (Another Book of Cartoons) by Bert Dodson. McFarland & Company, Inc., 1990. 1990s. An exploratory model of the impact of rapid climate change on the world food 579 situation. The Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies, Stanford University, Paper No. 0034. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1990t. A reexamination of hilltopping in Euphydryas editha. Oecologia. 83:259-260. (with J.F. Baughman and D.D. Murphy). 1990u. (Chapter) Population and the greenhouse warming. In: Terrell J. Minger (ed.) Greenhouse Glasnost: The Crisis of Global Warming. The Ecco Press, 1990. pp. 167-180. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990v. (Preface) The Rest of the World is Watching: Tasmania and the Greens. Cassandra Pybus and Richard Flanagan (eds.). Pan MacMillan, Sydney, Australia. p. 9. 1990w. Birding for fun: Evolutionary theory and birding. American Birds. 44:3, Fall 1990. pp. 353-355. 1990x. Jasper Ridge, A Stanford Sanctuary. Susan Wels (ed.). Stanford Alumni Association, Stanford, California, 1990. (with Barbara Bocek, Nona Chiariello, Harold A. Mooney, John H. Thomas, and Peter M. Vitousek). 1990y. How the rich can save the poor and themselves: Lessons from the global warming. Proceedings of the International Conference on Global Warming and Climate Change. New Delhi, February 1989. Sujata Gupta and R.K. Pa chauri (eds.). pp. 287-294. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1990z. History, selection, drift, and gene flow: complex differentiation in checkerspot butterflies. Can. J. Zool. Vol. 68, pp.1967-1975. (with J. Baughman, P. Brussard, and D. Murphy). 1990aa. An exploratory model of the impact of rapid climate change on the world food situation. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B, Vol. 241, pp. 232- 244. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1990bb. Too many rich folks. 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(Interview) Stemming the human tide. The Cousteau Society Calypso Log, February1991. pp. 16-18. 1991h. Birding for fun: Seeking sapsucker secrets. American Birds. 44:5, Winter1990. pp. 1067-1070. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1991i. How the rich can save the poor and themselves: lessons from the global warming. Pacific and Asian Journal of Energy. Vol. 3:2, December1989. pp.. 53-63. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1991j. (Review) For the Common Good: Redirecting the Economy Toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future by Herman E. Daly and John B. Cobb, Jr. American Political Science Review. Vol. 84:4,1990. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1991k. (Chapter) Population growth threatens global resources. In: Global Resources: Opposing Viewpoints. Matthew Polesetsky, (Ed.). Greenhaven Press, Inc., San Diego, CA,1991. pp. 98-104. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1991l. We've run the test. Population and Environment: A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies. 12:3, Spring1991. pp. 189-191. 1991m. (Chapter) Population control: Necessary but insufficient. In: The Mother Earth Handbook. Judith S. Scherff (Ed.). Continuum Publishing Company, New York,1991. pp. 17-31. (with Anne H. Erhlich). 1991n. Integrated pest management in Latin America. Environmental Conservation. 17:4, Winter1990. pp. 341-350. (with Karen Holl and Gretchen Daily). 1991o. Forest canopy structure at overwintering Monarch butterfly sites: Measurements with hemispherical photography. Conservation Biology. 5:2, June1991. (with Stuart C. Weiss, Paul M. Rich, Dennis D. Murphy, William H. Calvert). 1991p. Foreword: Facing up to climate change. Global Climate Change and Life on Earth. Richard L. Wyman (Ed). Routledge, Chapman and Hall, New York,1991. pp. ix- xiii. 1991q. Birding for fun: The sex life of birds. American Birds. 45:1, Spring1991. pp. 21-22. 1991r. Estimating the effects of scientific study on two butterfly populations. Amer. Nat.. 137:2, February1991. pp. 227-243. (with S. Harrison, J.F. Baughman, J.K. Quinn and D.D. Murphy). 1991s. Biodiversity and humanity: Science and public policy. Environmental Awareness.14:1, Jan-Mar1991. pp. 27- 35. 1991t. Pest control and the human predicament. In: Progress and Perspectives for the 21st Century. Julius J. Menn and Allen L. Steinhauer (Eds.) Entomological Society of America, Lanham MD,1991. pp. 119-126. 1991u. Birding for fun: Sexual selection. American Birds. 45:2, Summer1991. pp. 200- 202. 1991v. Biodiversity studies: Science and policy. Science. Aug, 16,1991. Vol. 253. pp. 758-762. (with E. O. Wilson). 1991w. (Intro.) Keep an eye on the big picture. Audubon Endangered Planet Calendar 1992. Macmillan Publishing Company, New York. 1991x. Population growth and environmental security. The Georgia Review. Vol. XLV, No. 2, Summer1991. pp. 223-232. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1991y. Healing the Planet. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, New York,1991. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1991z. Figs, fun, and Tangara tanagers. Amigos Newsletter, Robert and Catherine Wilson, Botanical Garden, Organization for Tropical Studies. #31, May. pp 6-9. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1991aa. Facing up to climate change. In: Global Climate Change and Life on Earth, R.L. Wyman (ed.) Routledge, Chapman and Hall, New York. pp. ix-xiii. 1991bb. Audubon's global view (letter). New York Times, July 6. 1991cc. Canaries in the global mine. Living Bird. Vol. 10. Autumn1991, pp. 10-13. 617 1991dd. (Letter) Population diversity and the future of ecosystems. Science. Vol. 254. October1991. p. 175. 1991ee. Birding for fun: Displays and Dominance. American Birds. 45:3, Fall1991. pp. 366-368. 1991gg. Greenhouse economics: Learn before you leap. Ecological Economics, 4(1991). Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam. (with Gretchen Daily, Harold Mooney and Anne Ehrlich). pp. 1-10. 1991hh. (Foreword) The Ecology of Fishes on Coral Reefs. Peter F. Sale (Ed.) Academic Press, Inc., San Diego,1991. p. xv-xvi. 1991ii. (Statement) Save the Earth. Jonathon Porritt. Dorling Kindersling, London,1991. (with A. Ehrlich) p. 119. 1991jj. (Chapter) Coevolution and its applicability to the Gaia Hypothesis. In: Scientists on Gaia. Stephen H. Schneider and Penelope J. Boston, Eds. The MIT Press,1991. pp.19-22. 1992a. (Readings) from Healing the Planet: Strategies for Solving the Environmental Crisis (Addison-Wesley,1991, with A.H. Ehrlich). Sierra. Nov\Dec1991. pp. 107- 108. 1992b. Determinants of spatial distribution in a population of the subalpine butterfly Oeneis chryxus. Oecologia. December 1991. 88:4, pp. 587-596. (with G. Daily and D. Wheye). 1992c. (Chapter) Can we respond to the growing environmental threat to civilization? In: Environment in Peril. Anthony B. Wolbarst (Ed.) Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington,1991. pp. 110-139. 1992d. Birding for fun: Counting Birds. American Birds. 45:5, Winter 1991. pp. 1041- 1043. 1992e. Population, ecosystem services, and the human food supply. Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies. Paper No. 0044. Stanford University,1992. (with A.H. Ehrlich and G.C. Daily). 1992f. Point/Counterpoint. Carrying Capacity Network FOCUS. Vol.1, No. 2, Winter 1992. pp.46-50. 1992g. Population, sustainability, and Earth's carrying capacity. Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies. Paper No. 0046. Stanford University,1992. (with G.C. Daily). 1992h. The challenges of conservation biology. Ecological Applications. Vol. 2, No. 1, Feb.1992. pp. 1-2. (with Peter F. Brussard). 1992i. The most overpopulated nation. In: Elephants in the Volkswagen: Facing the tough questions about our overcrowded country. Lindsay Grant (ed.) W. H. Freeman and Co., New York,1992. pp. 125-33. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992j. (Statement) Now, if I ruled the world. Sierra. Vol. 77, No. 3, May/June1992. pp. 118-119. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992k. Population biology of checkerspot butterflies and the preservation of global biodiversity. Oikos 63:1, Copenhagen 1992. pp. 6-12. 1992l. Birding for fun: Birds and the literature. American Birds. 46:1, Spring 1992. pp. 18-20. 1992m. When there is no safety in numbers. Cooperazione. No. 113, April 1992. pp. 22-23. 1992n. Environmental deterioration, biodiversity and the preservation of civilization. The Environmentalist. 12:1,1992. pp. 9-14. 1992o. Human appropriation of the products of photosynthesis. Carrying Capacity Network Focus. 2:2, Spring 1992. pp. 34-41. (with Peter Vitousek, Anne Ehrlich and Pamela Matson). 1992p. (Interview) Defusing the people bomb. Newsweek, May 26,1992. p. 56. 1992q. Notes on some butterflies of the Wilson Botanical Garden. Amigos Newsletter. May 1992. Organization of Tropical Studies. pp. 4-8. (with Gretchen Daily). 1992r. The scale of the human enterprise: What should the Earth Summit accomplish? Environmental Awareness. 15:2, April-June 1992. pp. 73-76. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992s. The value of biodiversity. Ambio. 21:3, May 1992. pp. 219-226. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992t. (Chapter) Causes and consequences of the disappearance of biodiversity. In: Mexico Confronts the Challenges of Biodiversity. Comision Nacional para El Conocimiento y Uso de La Biodiversidad, Mexico, 1992. Jose Sarukhan and Rodolfo Dirzo (Eds.) pp. 43-55. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992u. (Chapter) Ecosystem risks associated with the Population Explosion. In: Predicting Ecosystem Risk. John Cairns, Jr., B.R. Niederlehner, and David R. Orvos (Eds.) Princeton Scientific Publishing Co., Inc., 1992. pp. 9-21. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992v. Birding for fun: Birds in jeopardy. American Birds, 46:2, Summer 1992. pp.188-192. 1992w. Protecting biotic diversity in the tropics. Wings: Essays on Invertebrate Conservation. The Xerces Society, Summer 1992. pp. 22-23. (with D.D. Murphy). 1992x. Birds in Jeopardy: The Imperiled and Extinct Birds of the United States and Canada, including Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Stanford University Press. (with David S. Dobkin and Darryl Wheye). 1992y. Needed: An endangered humanity act? The Amicus Journal. 14:3, Fall 1992. pp. 26-27. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992z. Population growth, economic growth, and market economies. Contention. 2:1, pp. 17-35. (with Gretchen C. Daily and Lawrence H. Goulder). 1992aa. Government, bedrooms, and the environment: A response to Keith Griffin. Contention. 2:1, pp. 45-57. (with Gretchen C. Daily and Lawrence H. Goulder). 1992bb. (Commentary) The axman cometh. San Jose Mercury News. September 26, 1992, p. 11B. 1992cc. The professional biologist: One ecologist's opinion on the so-called Stanford scandals and social responsibility. BioScience. 42:9. Oct.1992. pp. 702- 705. 1992dd. The Population Explosion (Excerpts from the book The Population Explosion). Nomad. Fall 1992. pp. 16-20. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992ee. The most overpopulated nation. Carrying Capacity Network: Clearinghouse Bulletin. 2:8, Oct. 1992. pp. 1-3, 7. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992ff. Population, sustainability, and Earth's carrying capacity. BioScience. 42:10, Nov.1992. pp. 761-771. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1992gg. The environment and the election. The Commonwealth. Nov. 2, 1992. pp.663- 667. 1992hh. Birding for fun: Thoughts on sparrows. American Birds. 46:3, Fall 1992. pp. 354-356. 1992ii. The most overpopulated nation. The Egg: An Eco-Justice Quarterly. 12:4, Fall 1992. pp. 4-5. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1992jj. Ecological economists: A new breed. Chicago Tribune, Saturday, Oct. 24, 1992. 1992kk. (Chapter) World population crisis. In: Sources: Notable Selections in Sociology. Kurt Finsterbusch and Janet S. Schwartz, Eds. Dushkin Publishing Group, Inc.1993. pp. 285-289. (with Anne. H. Ehrlich). 1992ll. Ecological economists: The new breed. Telicom. XI:3, Nov./Dec.1992. pp. 26-27. 1992mm. Too little, too late, too many. San Jose Mercury News. Commentary. December 23, 1992. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1993a. (Review) The Diversity of Life by Edward O. Wilson. Pacific Discovery, Winter 1992. pp. 50-51. 1993b. Needed: An endangered humanity act? Endangered Species. Winter 1993, pp. 12-13, 20. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1993c. Double keystone bird in a keystone species complex. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. Vol. 90, pp. 592-594. January 1993. (with Gretchen D. Daily and Nick M. Haddad). 1993d. Birding for fun: Avian coevolution. American Birds. 45:5, Winter 1992. pp. 1078-1081. 1993e. The most overpopulated nation. In: Greater Los Angeles Green Pages: The Local Handbook for Planet Maintenance. Green Media Group, Berkeley. 1993. pp. 230-231. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1993f. (Interview) A population policy for the super-consumers. In: Environment by Peter H. Raven, Linda R. Berg, George B. Johnson. Saunders College Publishing, 1993. pp. 138- 139. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1993g. (Foreword) Biodiversity and ecosystem function: Need we know more? In: Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function. Ernst-Detlet Schulze and Harold A. Mooney (eds). Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1993. pp. vii-xi. 1993h. Population extinction and saving biodiversity. Ambio. 22:2-3, May 1993. pp. 64-68. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1993i. Species count tied to environment loss. San Francisco Chronicle. May 21, 1993. 1993j. Birding for fun: Sapsuckers, swallows, willow, aspen, and rot. American Birds. 47:1, Spring 1993. pp. 18- 20. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1993k. Food security, population, and environment. Population and Development 674 Review, 19:1, March 1993. pp. 1-32. (with Anne H. Ehrlich and Gretchen C. Daily). 1993l. Repairing a damaged world: An outline for ecological restoration.1993. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty. Ltd., Australia. (with Denis A. Saunders', Richard J. Hobbs) 1993m. Extinction. (Japanese edition with new introduction). 1993. Translation rights arranged through Japan UNI Agency Inc. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1993n. The effect of fluorescent pigments on butterfly copulation. Ecological Entomology. 18:2, May 1993. pp. 165- 167. (with Erica Fleishman, John F. Baughman, Alan E. Launer). 1993o. Birding for fun: Avian adaptation. American Birds. 47:2, Summer 1993. pp.195-198. 1993p. Elogio della molteplicita. Sapere. Luglio/agosto 1993. 59:7/8 (961). pp. 5-10. (with Edward O. Wilson). 1993q. Denari e morale. Sapere. Luglio/agosto 1993. 59:7/8 (961). pp. 27-37. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1993r. Nature Conservation 3: Reconstruction of Fragmented Ecosystems. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty Limited, Australia, 1993. (edited with Denis A. Saunders and Richard J. Hobbs). 1993s. (Preface) Nature Conservation 3: Reconstruction of Fragmented Ecosystems. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty Limited, Australia, 1993. D.A. Saunders, R.J. Hobbs, and P.R. Ehrlich (eds.) pp. ix-xi. (with R.J. Hobbs). 1993t. The scale of the human enterprise. In: Nature Conservation 3: Reconstruction of Fragmented Ecosystems. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty Limited, Australia, 1993. D.A. Saunders, R.J. Hobbs, and P.R. Ehrlich (eds.) pp. 3-8. 1993u. Communication: how can ecologists get their message out? In: Nature Conservation 3: Reconstruction of Fragmented Ecosystems. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty Limited, Australia, 1993. D.A. Saunders, R.J. Hobbs, and P.R. Ehrlich (eds.) pp. 295-301. 1993v. Reconstruction of fragmented ecosystems: problems and possibilities. In: Nature Conservation 3: Reconstruction of Fragmented Ecosystems. Surrey Beatty & Sons Pty Limited, Australia, 1993. D.A. Saunders, R.J. Hobbs, and P.R. Ehrlich (eds.) pp. 305-313. (with D.A. Saunders and R.J. Hobbs). 1993w. Is the extinction crisis real? Wildlife Conservation. Sept/Oct.1993, pp. 66-67. 1993x. A Guide to the Natural History of the Birds of St. Lawrence Island, Alaska. Center for Conservation Biology, 1993. (with David S. Dobkin, Darryl Wheye, Stuart L. Pimm, and John Kelly). 1993y. Poblacion y medio ambiente: hacia donde vamos ahora? Revista Chilena de Historia Natural, 66:5-10, 1993. 1993z. Social dominance and saving biodiversity. Amigos Newsletter. September 1993. Organization for Tropical Studies. pp. 14-15. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1993aa. Birding for fun: Dominance and dickey-bird dining. American Birds. Vol. 47, No. 3, Fall 1993. pp. 343- 345. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1993bb. Overburdened world. San Francisco Chronicle. November 29,1993. 1993cc. Science and the management of natural resources. Ecological Applications. 3(4), 1993. pp. 558-560. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1993dd. Ehrlich on immigration: Separate science from politics. Audubon Activist. November 1993. p.4. 1993ee. (Review) Critical Condition: Human Health and the Environment edited by Eric Chivian, M.D., Michael McCally, M.D., Ph.D., Howard Hu, M.D., M.P.H., Sc.D., and Andrew Haines, M.D. The PSR Quarterly. 3:4, December 1993, pp.195-196. 1993ff. (Chapter) Animal responses at the organism level. In: J.R. Kercher, H.A. Mooney and G. R. Grow, eds., Research Agenda for Ecological Effects of Nuclear Winter. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA. pp. 24-25. (with C. Heller and D. Pimentel). Manuscript date June 1985. 1993gg. Puddling behavior by Bay checkerspot butterflies (Euphydryas editha bayensis). J. of Research on the Lepidoptera. 32:45-52. (with A.E. Launer, D.D. Murphy, C.L. Boggs, J.F. Baughman, and S.B. Weiss) 1994a. Adult emergence phenology in checkerspot butterflies: The effects of macroclimate, topoclimate, and population history. Oecologia. (1993) 96:2, pp. 261- 270. (with S. Weiss, D. Murphy, and C. Metzler). 1994b. Guest essay: Simple Simon environmental analysis. In: Living in the Environment: Principles, Connections, and Solutions, G. Tyler Miller, Jr. Wadsworth Publishing Co., pp. 26-27. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1994c. Birding for fun: Birds, butterflies, and forest patches. American Birds. Winter 1993. pp. 1044-1046. 1994d. Host specialization of satyrine butterflies, and their responses to habitat 699 fragmentation in Trinidad. Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera. 30(3-4), 1991. pp. 248-256. (with M.C. Singer). 1994e. (Chapt.) The human population problem: As explosive as ever? In: N. Polunin and J. Burnett, eds.1993. Surviving with the Biosphere. Edinburgh Univ. Press, Edinburgh, UK. pp. 270-281. (with N. Myers and A.H. Ehrlich). 1994f. (Chapt.) Ecological economics. In: World Affairs Journal: A Compendium, 1993. Los Angeles World Affairs Council. pp. 108-116. 1994g. Overpopulating the planet isn't a human right. New York Newsday. Tuesday, January 25, 1994. pp. 40, 82. 1994h. (Preface) The National Audubon Society. Almanac of the Environment: The Ecology of Everyday Life, 1994. Grossett/Putnam Book. pp. xiii-xiv. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1994i. Enhancing the status of population biology. Trends in Evolution and Ecology. 9:4, April 1994. p. 157. 1994j. Special guest lecture: Miners' canaries and saving the mine. Forest Remnants in the Tropical Landscape: Benefits and Policy Implications, 1993. Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center. pp. 83-90. 1994k. Food security, population and environment. Sistema Terra. II:3, Nov.1993. pp. 7-9, 83-84. (With Anne H. Ehrlich and Gretchen C. Daily). 1994l. A Costa Rican paradise. Birder's World. June 1994. pp. 62-64. 1994m. The fertility plateau in Costa Rica: A review of causes and remedies. Environmental Conservation. 20:4. Winter 1993. pp. 317-323. (with Karen D. Holl and Gretchen C. Daily). 1994n. (Chapt.) Ecological economics and the carrying capacity of Earth. In: AnnMari Jansson, Monica Hammer, Carl Folke, and Robert Costanza (eds.), Investing in Natural Capital. Island Press, Washington DC. pp. 38-56. 1994o. (Chapt.) The bottom line: Human population control. In: Principles of Conservation Biology, edited by Gary K. Meffe, C. Ronald Carroll. Sinauer Assoc., Inc., pp. 546-547. 1994p. Butterflies used as a rapid assessment tool. Amigos Newsletter.1994, 40:12-24. (with Gretchen D. Daily). 1994q. Energy use and biodiversity loss. Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences (The Royal Society). 1994, 344:99-104. 1994r. (Essay) Simple Simon environmental analysis. In: Environmental Science: Working with the Earth, G. Tyler Miller, Jr., Wadsworth Pub. Co., pp. 22-23 (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1994s. (Foreword) Uncertainty and insurance. In: Global Warming and the Built Environment, R. Samuels and D.K. Prasad, (eds.), E & FN Spon, London, pp. xv- xviii. 1994t. (Review) A controversial analysis of population issues. Living within Limits: Ecology, Economics, and Population Taboos, by Garret Hardin (Oxford University Press, 1993). The Quarterly Review of Biology. 69:2, pp. 237-240. (with G.C. Daily). 1994u. Population and sustainable development. Environmental Awareness. 17:2, pp. 53-58. 1994v. Optimum human population size. Population and Environment. 15:6, July 1994. pp. 469-475. (with G.C. Daily and A.H. Ehrlich). 1994w. (Chapt.) Human population growth and global change. In: Ecological and Social Dimensions of Global Change. D.D. Caron, F.S. Chapin III, J. Donoghue, M. Firestone, J. Harte, L.E. Wells, and R. Stewardson, Eds. Inst. of Itnl. Studies, Berkeley, 1994. pp. 119-146. 1994x. The Birdwatcher's Handbook: A Guide to the Natural History of the Birds of Britain and Europe. Oxford University Press, 1994. (with David S. Dobkin, Darryl Wheye, and Stuart L. Pimm). 1994y. Techniques and guidelines for monitoring neotropical butterflies. Conservation Biology. 8:3, pp. 800-809. (with H.R. Sparrow, T.D. Sisk, and D.D. Murphy). 1994z. Identifying extinction threats. BioScience. 44:9, October. pp. 593-604. (with T.D. Sisk, A.E. Launer, and K.R. Switky). 1994aa. Notes on butterfly distributions in Southern Costa Rica. Tropical Lepidoptera. 5:1, pp. 21-23. (with H.R. Sparrow, T.D. Sisk, and G.C. Daily). 1994bb. A personal view of Cairo. TELICOM. XI:22, October. pp. 30-31. 1994cc. Estimating female reproductive success of a threatened butterfly: Influence of emergence time and hostplant phenology. Oecologia. 99:194-200. (with J.H. Cushman, C.L. Boggs, S.B. Weiss, D.D. Murphy, and A.W. Harvey).
1994dd. Perils of a modern Cassandra: some personal comments. Social Epistemology. 8:3, pp. 239-240.
1994ee. Taming the pit bull? Property rights case law and implementation of The Endangered Species Act. The Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies, Paper #0055. (with Lynn E. Dwyer and Dennis D. Murphy).
1994ff. Influence of social status on individual foraging and community structure in a bird guild. Oecologia. 100:153-165. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1995a. (Introduction) Wild birds are in jeopardy. Audubon Wild Bird Desk Diary 1995. Macmillan Publishing Co., New York, 4 pp.
1995b. (Commentary) Global population. RSA Journal. CXLII:5455, Dec.1994, p. 6.
1995c. Population and immigration policy in the United States. The Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies, Stanford University, Paper #0053. (with Gretchen C. Daily and Anne H. Ehrlich). 1995d. (Chapter) The scale of the human enterprise and biodiversity loss. In: Extinction Rates. John H. Lawton and Robert M. May (Eds.) Oxford University Press, 1995. pp. 214-226.
1995e. The population bomb has exploded. Newsweek, Jan. 30, 1995, (one page). (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1995f. Socioeconomic equity: A critical element in sustainability. Ambio. 24:1, Feb. 1995. pp. 58-59. (with Gretchen C. Daily and Anne H. Ehrlich).
1995g. (Foreword) While there's time. In: Australia's Biodiversity Living Wealth. Andrew J. Beattie (Ed.). Reed Books Australia, 1995, (one page).
1995h. (Chapt.) It is imperative to estimate the Earth's "Carrying Capacity". In: Population: Opposing Viewpoints. Charles F. Hohm (Ed.) Greenhaven Press, Inc., 1995, pp. 82-89. (with Gretchen C. Daily).
1995i. Preservation of biodiversity in small rainforest patches: Rapid evaluations using butterfly trapping. Biodiversity and Conservation. 4:35-55. (with Gretchen C. Daily).
1995j. Pledge 107, In: The Earth Pledge Book. John F. Ince (Ed.), Timely Visions Publishing Company, 1994, p. 132.
1995k. Wagering on global environment. San Francisco Chronicle, Open Forum. May 18, 1995.
1995l. (Review) Whose problem is it anyway? Overpopulation on a shrinking planet. Critical Masses: The Global Population Challenge by George D. Moffett. Viking, 1994. Los Angeles Times. Feb. 5, 1995.
1995m. (Letter) Response to Woodwell. BioScience. 45:6, p. 380. (with T. Sisk, A. Launer, and K. Switky).
1995n. (Chapter) Population extinction and the biodiversity crisis. In: Biodiversity Conservation, C.A. Perrrings et al. (Eds.), 1995 Kluwer Academic Publishers, Netherlands. pp. 45-55. (with Gretchen C. Daily).
1995o. A test for isolation-by-distance in Central Rocky Mountain and Great Basin 742 populations of Edith's checkerspot butterfly (Euphydryas editha). Journal of Heredity.1995: 86:204-210. (with H.B. Britten, P.F. Brussard, and D.D. Murphy.)
1995p. The meaning of sustainability: Biogeophysical aspects. In: Defining and MeasuringSustainability, M. Munasinghe and W. Shearer (Eds.), 1995 United Nations University, New York. pp. 3-17. (with John P. Holdren and Gretchen C. Daily). 1995q. Bets and "Ecofantasies." The Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies, Paper #0060. Stanford University, 1995. (with Stephen H. Schneider).
1995r. Socioeconomic equity, sustainability, and Earth's carrying capacity. The Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies, Paper #0059. Stanford University, 1995. (with Gretchen C. Daily).
1995s. Response to Bartlett and Lytwak (1995): Population and immigration policy in 746 the United States. Population and Environment. 16:6, pp. 521-526. (with Gretchen C. Daily and Anne H. Ehrlich).
1995t. (Review) Economics and the environment: Small is Stupid Blowing the Whistle on the Greens by Wilfred Beckerman (Duckworth, 1995). TREE. 10:9, Sept.1995. p. 386.
1995u. Property rights case law and the challenge to the Endangered Species Act. Conservation Biology. 9:4, pp. 725-741. (with Lynn E. Dwyer and Dennis D. Murphy).
1995v. (Essay) Growing beyond our limits. In: Scientific American: Triumph of Discovery, Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1995. pp. 181-183. (with Anne H. Ehrlich).
1995w. What it will take. Mother Jones. Sept./Oct.1995, pp. 52-55. (with Anne H. Ehrlich and Gretchen C. Daily). 1995x. The Stork & the Plow. Putnam Publishing, New York, 1995. (with Anne H. Ehrlich and Gretchen C. Daily).
1995y. Call it brownlash. World Watch. Sept./Oct.1995, pp. 5-6 1995z. (Letter) The role of experiments in ecology. Science. Vol. 270, Oct. 27, 1995. p. 561. (with M.E. Power, D. Tilman, S.T. Carpenter, et al.).
1995aa. Bets and "Ecofantasies." Environmental Awareness. 18:2,1995. pp. 47-50. (with Stephen H. Schneider).
1995bb. Our demographic future: Predictions for the next 50 years. Population Today. 23:12, December 1995, p. 3.
1995cc. The equity answer to the human dilemma. The Commonwealth. 89:46, pp. 1-6, 756 11, November 13,1995. 1995dd. (Chapter) Biodiversity and ecosystem functioning: Basic principles. Context: Biodiversity and ecosystem services. In: Global Biodiversity Assessment, V.H. Heywood, Ed., UNEP, Cambridge University Press,1995. pp. 282-285.
1995ee. Development, global change, and the epidemiological environment. The MorrisonInstitute for Population and Resource Studies, Paper #0062. Stanford University,1995. (with Gretchen C. Daily).
1995ff. Knowledge and perceptions in Costa Rica regarding environment, population, and biodiversity issues. Conservation Biology. 9:6, pp. 1548-1558. (with Karen D. Holl and Gretchen C. Daily).
1996a. Nothing new. BioScience. 46:1, p. 5. (with Gretchen C. Daily).
1996b. Human appropriation of renewable fresh water. Science. 297:5250. pp. 785-788. (with Sandra L. Postel and Gretchen C. Daily).
1996c. (Chapter) Human population dynamics and biodiversity loss. In: The Economics and Ecology of Biodiversity Decline: The Forces Driving Global Change, Timothy M. Swanson, Ed., Cambridge University Press,1995. pp. 125-141. (with Fraser D.M. Smith and Gretchen C. Daily).
1996d. Response to Bartlett and Lytwak (1995): Population and immigration policy in the U.S. Carrying Capacity Network, Focus. 6:1, pp. 61-63. (with Gretchen Daily and Anne Ehrlich).
1996e. Managing Earth's life support systems: The game, the players, and getting everyone to play. Ecological Applications. 6(1), pp.19-21. (with Gretchen C. Daily and Marina Alberti).
1996f. (Letter) The business of butterflies. Audubon. 98:3, p. 12.
1996g. Sociology at work: Paul Ehrlich on the population explosion. In: Introduction to Sociology, Fifth Edition, Henry L. Tischler, Harcourt Brace College Publishers, 1996. p. 510.
1996h. Environmental anti-science. TREE. 11:9, p. 393. 1996i. (Letter ) New Scientist. August 24,1996. p. 48.
1996j. Betrayal of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future. Island Press, Washington, DC,1996. 320 pp. (with Anne H. Ehrlich).
1996k. The Beijer Institute's future. Beijer Annual Report 1995-1996. Beijer Internatl.Institute of Ecological Economics, The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Stockholm. p. 8
1996l. Population and environmental destruction. In: Meeting the Challenges of Population, Environment, and Resources: The Costs of Inaction (Report of the Senior Scientists' Panels, Third Annual World Bank Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development), The World Bank, Oct. 1995. pp. 27-28. 1996m. Nocturnality and species survival. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 93:11709-11712. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1996n. Beware the brownlash -- A backlash against green ideas. Nob Hill Gazette, November 1996, p. 10. 1996o. Biodiversity and the brownlash. Defenders. Fall 1996. pp. 6-17. (with Anne H. Ehrlich). 1996p. Socioeconomic equity, sustainability, and Earth's carrying capacity. Ecological Applications. 6(4):991-1001. (with Gretchen C. Daily).
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1998p. Environmental Quality and Regional Conflict: A Report to the Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict. December 1998, Carnegie Corporation of New York. (with Donald Kennedy, David Holloway, Erika Weinthal, Walter Falcon, Roz Naylor, Michael May, Steven Schneider, Stephen Fetter, and Jor-San Choi). 1999a. (Review) A prime Canadian natural resource lost at sea: Lament For an Ocean: The Collapse of the Atlantic Cod Fishery by Michael Harris, McClelland & Stewart, Ontario, Canada, 1998. In: The San Francisco Chronicle, Jan. 3, 1999, Book Review, p. 7. 1999b. S.F. butterfly park deserves a chance. San Francisco Chronicle, "Open Forum," March 5, 1999. 1999c. Professors urge change. The Stanford Daily, March 30,1999. (with Donald Kennedy and Stephen Schneider). 1999d. Food production, population growth, and the environment. Beijer Reprint Series, No. 103. Beijer Intl. Institute of Ecological Economics, The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. (with G. Daily, P. Dasgupta, B. Bolin, P.Crosson, J. du Guerny, C. Folke, A. M. Jansson, B-O Jansson, N. Kautsky, A. Kinzig, S. Levin, K-G. Maler, P. Pinstrup-Andersen, D. Siniscalco, B. Walker). 1999e. Conservation in practice: Overcoming obstacles to implementation. Conservation Biology, 13:450-452. (with E. Fleishman, G.H. Wolff, C.L. Boggs, A.E. Launer, J.O. Niles, and T.H. Ricketts). 1999f. Knowledge of and attitudes toward population growth and the environment: university students in Costa Rica and the United States. Environmental Conservation, 26:1:66-74. (with Karen D. Holl, Gretechen C. Daily, Scott C. Daily and Sarice Bassin). 1999g. Ecologists, advocacy and public policy. EcoEssay Series Number 3 (response). National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, Santa Barbara CA. http://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/fmt/doc?/nceas-web/resources/ecoessay/ (with Harold Mooney). 1999h. Recent developments in environmental sciences. KNAW/Heineken Lectures 1998, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Amsterdam, 1999. Pp. 45-54. 1999i. Managing Earth's ecosystems: an interdisciplinary challenge. Ecosystems 2:277- 280. (with Gretchen C. Daily). 1999j. Ethics, evolution, and the population-environment crisis. http://www.scifac.usyd.edu.au/chast/templeton/1999lecture.html, Nov. 1999.
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