Lions and Tigers and Bears, All Gone!


Thom Hayden of the Christian Science Monitor describes William Stolzenburg’s new book, where the Wild Things Were: Life, Death, and Ecological Wreckage in a Land of Vanishing Predators. as “A refreshing blend of scientific rigor and personal observation” and “An absorbing and delightful work of natural history.”
In this impassioned debut, wildlife journalist Stolzenburg examines predation's crucial role in the preservation of ecological diversity, painting nightmarish pictures of what happens when top carnivores are exterminated from ecosystems. Without sea otters to keep ravenous sea urchins in check, some ocean floors in the North Pacific have been stripped of kelp. In Yellowstone National Park, the eradication of wolves has resulted in a glut of elk that have trampled river banks and chewed down young trees. White-tailed deer have denuded the undergrowth in the forests of the eastern United States because wolves and cougars have disappeared.
Without large meat eaters, mid-size predators (raccoons, blue jays, crows, squirrels, opossums) have proliferated, decimating songbird populations. In dazzling descriptions, Stolzenburg demonstrates how the delicate balance between predator and prey is so essential, and his book--rich in dramatic accounts of life and death in the wild--is powerful and compelling.
Stolzenburg lives in West Virginia, and his articles have appeared in Nature Conservancy and Science News. While his focus on the environment is slightly askew from most of the U.S. media’s, whose over saturation of the importance of global warming has numbed the majority of American’s into a agreeable stupor, Stolzenburg’s interest in animals and their interdependency offers readers not only a chance to educate themselves in a different field of conservation, but also the opportunity to find parallels between the animal planet and the human one.
This Friday, Stolzenburg will appear at the downtown library to kick off a new lunchtime program in conjunction with WBFO. The Meet the Author Lunchtime Library Series will not only be simulcast on WBFO, but the program will be recorded by C-SPAN for re-broadcast on its popular show Book Notes. Stolzenburg will be interviewed by Bert Gambini from noon to 1:00, and will be available to speak with fans and sign books after his reading outside the Encore Editions bookstore. Come find out for yourself what makes this subject and author so “remarkably engaging" according to Bill McKibben of the Boston Post.
For diners attending the author interview, seating will be available in both Fables Café and the Ring of Knowledge on a first-come, first-served basis. For those not having lunch, chairs for viewing the simulcast will be available in the Ring of Knowledge. Early arrival is recommended, as seating is limited. Lunch orders may be placed in advance (Friday morning) by calling 716.858.7127 (view the menu online at www.fablescafe.com).
For more information and details, click here. For Thom Hayde's review click here.

For Amy Taravella, this weekend means her solo in what took two years to accomplish. The artist has been working in an intensive two-week creation session with three other artists in four different cities in two different countries. Together, they have scrapped together funds to combine their talents and create a unique production based on the four humours.
The four humours was a theory of the makeup and workings of the human body that began with Greek and Roman philosophers. The …
Alt Theatre now has some company in the Great Arrow Building at 255 Elmwood Avenue – The Manny Fried Playhouse. The Subversive Theatre Collective has been bounced from venue to venue to produce plays and our proud to present this newly opened theatre as their permanent home. They will be celebrating with a Theatre Warming party on Friday, September 5th.
The Playhouse will be named after Manny Fried, the man in the photograph with this post. Fried is a Buffalo native who since t …
In the March issue of BR, an image was used for the article of the Buffalo Club that led to the introduction to Dr. V. Roger Lalli, and his photo-realistic watercolors of Buffalo.
At 86 years of age, Dr. Lalli is a dynamic and passionate supporter of Buffalo as both the great city it once was, and the new one he sees dawning. He seems particularly well situated to tell his Buffalo story through his artwork, his role as an educator, historian and impassioned supporter of the cit …
Image: Antelope Headpiece with Basketry Cap, 18th Century 
(Bambara, Malli, Tji'Wara Society) 
Wood, plant, fiber - 
Collection Buffalo Museum of Science
The latest exhibit at the Albright-Knox will be one that takes viewers on a journey across the globe. It’s called “From Tusk to Tail: Animals and Art” and explores how different artists across the world have represented different animals. This is the second exhibit at the Knox that has been organized in partnership w … 



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tudorguy
I'm glad to know about this book - thanks for bringing it to our attention - I'll try to make it down to the Library. Now I know why there are so many darn CROWS!!!
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ChristaSeychew
Perhaps this article, and the book in turn, will help people not typically interested in food issues understand the importance of avoiding eating predators for dinner. Today we consume a lot of predatory sea life: most of us don't know what's predatory and what's not when we visit the supermarket or a restaurant. As consumers we need to start making sustainable food choices.
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