Rambunctious Garden
Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World
By Emma Marris
September 2011
$25.00
224 pp
6.125 x 9.25 in
Hardcover
ISBN-10: 1608190323
Rambunctious Garden
Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World
By Emma Marris
September 2011
$25.00
224 pp
6.125 x 9.25 in
Hardcover
By Emma Marris
A radical new look at conservation that will upend our long-held beliefs about what nature is and how to manage it.
A paradigm shift is roiling the environmental world. For decades people have unquestioningly accepted the idea that our goal is to preserve nature in its pristine, pre-human state. But many scientists have come to see this as an outdated dream that thwarts bold new plans to save the environment and prevents us from having a fuller relationship with nature. Humans have changed the landscapes they inhabit since prehistory, and climate change means even the remotest places now bear the fingerprints of humanity. Emma Marris argues convincingly that it is time to look forward and create the "rambunctious garden," a hybrid of wild nature and human management.
In this optimistic book, readers meet leading scientists and environmentalists and visit imaginary Edens, designer ecosystems, and Pleistocene parks. Marris describes innovative conservation approaches, including rewilding, assisted migration, and the embrace of so-called novel ecosystems.
Rambunctious Garden is short on gloom and long on interesting theories and fascinating narratives, all of which bring home the idea that we must give up our romantic notions of pristine wilderness and replace them with the concept of a global, half-wild rambunctious garden planet, tended by us.
Reviews for Rambunctious Garden:
The New York Times Green Blog posted this brilliant Q&A with Emma Marris, author of Rambunctious Garden
Emma Marris contributed to a Room For Debate post In the New York Times.
Andrew Revkin gave Rambunctious Garden a shout out on his DotEarth blog in the New York Times