Home PageBooksInformationMedia and News CenterSign UpTitle SearchLinksHome Page
 
Subjects>> Wetland Drainage, Restoration, and Repair


Wetland Drainage, Restoration, and Repair
Search the full text of this book:


Google Book Search
WETLAND DRAINAGE, RESTORATION, AND REPAIR
By Thomas R. Biebighauser
Price: $50.00
Format: cloth
ISBN: 978-0-8131-2447-6
Subjects: Nature/Environmental Studies
Pages: 236
Year Published: 2007
Illustrations: 230 color, 23 B/W photographs
Discount: short
Description:

Read or Download the Press Kit

Wetlands are a vital part of the landscape and ecology of the United States, providing critical habitat for fish and wildlife; yet they are being destroyed at an alarming rate. A detailed and comprehensive analysis of wetlands management, Wetland Drainage, Restoration, and Repair can help reverse this trend. The book begins with an historical overview of wetland destruction and repair over the past two hundred years and shows clearly how the effects on drained locations remain evident generations later. It also serves as a unique guide to aid anyone, from novice to engineer, engaged in the process of wetland restoration.

Author Thomas R. Biebighauser draws from his own vast experience in building and repairing more than 900 wetlands across North America. Included are numerous photographs and case studies that highlight successes and failures of past projects. Detailed, step-by-step instructions guide the reader through each restoration project. Woven throughout are stories of people across the continent--in schools, on farms, and in national forests--who are restoring wet meadows, bogs, emergent wetlands, ephemeral wetlands, and forested wetlands, often using the same tools that destroyed them. Biebighauser also provides a number of effective strategies for initiating and improving funding for wetlands programs.

Wetland Drainage, Restoration, and Repair is essential reading for all who care about these important ecosystems.

Thomas R. Biebighauser, a wildlife biologist for the USDA Forest Service in the Daniel Boone National Forest, has taught wetlands management workshops across North America. He is a three-time recipient of the Forest Service's national Taking Wing Award.

 

Reviews:

"Thomas Biebighauser does an effective job of making the case that with the right planning and a fundamental knowledge base, ecological landscape enhancement projects involving wetlands do not need to be as nearly complex, expensive, and constrained by regulations as they often are." --Journal of the New England Water Works Association, David J. Cameron

 

"The book provides a range of interesting and useful advice on approaches to wetland creation and restoration, including adaptive management techniques and 'learning from beavers.'"-- Mark Anderson-Wilk, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation

"Biebighauser's work is a thorough and accurate account about the good, the bad, and the ugly of wetland destruction and restoration. He objectively walks us through the history of wetland drainage, revealing clever solutions to dealing with soggy soil. In the process, he sets the stage for later portions of the book, where we learn how to be equally clever about bringing water back onto the landscape. The photographs are also excellent, showing historic perspective and illustrating what to do to bring wetlands back, or even put them where they never were."--Bruce A. Kingsbury, Director, Center for Reptile and Amphibian Conservation and Management, Indiana-Purdue University Fort Wayne







  ©2009 University Press of Kentucky
  All Rights Reserved