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Crossings: How Road Ecology Is Shaping the Future of Our Planet
Crossings: How Road Ecology Is Shaping the Future of Our Planet | Ben Goldfarb
30 posts | 7 read | 18 to read
An eye-opening account of the global ecological transformations wrought by roads, from the award-winning author of Eager. Some 40 million miles of roadways encircle the earth, yet we tend to regard them only as infrastructure for human convenience. While roads are so ubiquitous theyre practically invisible to us, wild animals experience them as entirely alien forces of death and disruption. In Crossings, environmental journalist Ben Goldfarb travels throughout the United States and around the world to investigate how roads have transformed our planet. A million animals are killed by cars each day in the U.S. alone, but as the new science of road ecology shows, the harms of highways extend far beyond roadkill. Creatures from antelope to salmon are losing their ability to migrate in search of food and mates; invasive plants hitch rides in tire treads; road salt contaminates lakes and rivers; and the very noise of traffic chases songbirds from vast swaths of habitat. Yet road ecologists are also seeking to blunt the destruction through innovative solutions. Goldfarb meets with conservationists building bridges for Californias mountain lions and tunnels for English toads, engineers deconstructing the labyrinth of logging roads that web national forests, animal rehabbers caring for Tasmanias car-orphaned wallabies, and community organizers working to undo the havoc highways have wreaked upon American cities. Today, as our planets road network continues to grow exponentially, the science of road ecology has become increasingly vital. Written with passion and curiosity, Crossings is a sweeping, spirited, and timely investigation into how humans have altered the natural worldand how we can create a better future for all living beings.
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review
Chelsea.Poole
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Pickpick

Crossings is an eye-opening and incredibly thorough look at the way the human-created roads are affecting everything from deer populations and monarch butterfly migration in North America, to kangaroo roadkill and orphaned wallabies in New Zealand. Goldfarb lays out ways humans are correcting our mistakes—building land bridges for crossings and planting milkweed for butterflies. Is it enough? Can we do more?
I loved this book!!

CoffeeK8 This sounds fascinating 8mo
Hooked_on_books Yes! This was so good! 8mo
73 likes4 stack adds2 comments
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Christinak
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I am working on one more non fiction read to wrap up the month.

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Soubhiville
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Did you know that the road systems humans have built interrupt migrations, isolate animals in territories too small for them, kill an impossibly huge number of creatures daily, and pollute soil and waterways?

A main focus of this book is wildlife crossings by underpass, overpass, culvert, even tiny pipes for rodents, and the amount they cut back on road deaths is astounding.

I wasn‘t expecting the section on roads isolating humans.

Excellent!

Soubhiville I‘m confident this will make my best of list for the year. Highly recommend. @Hooked_on_books 11mo
Soubhiville Sietje is keeping an eye on the ecology of the apartment parking lot 🐶😁. Actually we have a view of big trees that usually have birds and squirrels, plus a view of other residents walking dogs. She likes to watch. 11mo
ShelleyBooksie I haven't read this one as I was worried it would be too depressing. Does it provide hope? Love the picture of Sietje ♡ 11mo
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Gissy Interesting and I agree with @ShelleyBooksie and yes, Sietje looks adorable 🐶 ❤️❤️❤️ 11mo
Soubhiville @ShelleyBooksie I felt like there was some hope, in that money is being allocated to improve and add to crossings to get animals across safely, and that new roads can be built to take wildlife into account from the beginning. Also unused roads can be returned to a wild state, which has been shown possible in some places. (Is it enough? No. But better than nothing?) 11mo
Leftcoastzen 🐶👏 11mo
dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 11mo
Bookzombie This sounds really interesting. They built a huge land bridge in San Antonio before I left. It links two sides of a park, but also keeps animals from having to cross the parkway. https://www.philhardbergerpark.org/land-bridge 11mo
Hooked_on_books I loved this one, too! His previous book about beavers (Eager) was great, so I figured this one would be, and it was a favorite of last year for me. I‘m glad Sietje has some good stuff to keep her eyes on! 11mo
Soubhiville @Bookzombie oh I heard of that one! I wish I had gone to see it before I moved. I‘m so glad it‘s there, and if I ever make it back down there I will check it out. Thanks for the link! 11mo
Soubhiville @Hooked_on_books I forgot he wrote Eager! Now I‘m going to have to read that 📖😆. 11mo
squirrelbrain Sounds fascinating- stacked. 11mo
88 likes6 stack adds12 comments
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Floresj
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Pickpick

This informative book presented aspects of roads and infrastructure that impact an area‘s ecology in ways I never even considered. Readable and organized, it changed what I noticed on my drive to mountains on I70 in Colorado. Not the usual ecology book- which made it so enjoyable.

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Soubhiville
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I got my local library card today. I feel like it was a good way to celebrate being here 4 weeks! My one reading goal this year is to #readmyowndamnbooks, but of course I had to check a couple out as well.

Cerulean Sea was on their $1 paperback FOTL shelf, and I couldn‘t resist. I loaned out my original copy and it never came back to me. I‘ll definitely reread it at some point!

Both of the other authors were at #TXBookFest last year 😁.

AmyG 4 weeks already? 11mo
Soubhiville @AmyG I know! Time flies. 11mo
Matilda I JUST finished Inverse Cowgirl 11mo
See All 9 Comments
WorldsOkayestStepMom Congrats on getting your library card! I'm in the middle of Cerulean Sea right now! 11mo
AnnR Congratulations! I hope it is a nice library. 11mo
Megabooks Yay!!! 11mo
Hooked_on_books Getting that fresh new library card is always an exciting day! I LOVED Crossings. It‘s just fascinating. And I‘m curious about Cowgirl. 11mo
Chelsea.Poole Cowgirl has popped up twice in my litsy in the last few minutes and I‘ve never heard of it before tonight! Congrats on the library card 😊 11mo
Ruthiella Fantastic! It‘s such a great feeling getting your library card from a new place! 😃 11mo
85 likes1 stack add9 comments
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keithmalek

Readers who enjoyed this book might also enjoy "The Age of Deer" by Erika Howsare.

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keithmalek
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Very interesting!

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keithmalek

I asked Abra how to say "roadkill" in Portuguese. Atropelemento, she said--literally, "run over." Like roadkill, atropelamento had acquired nonliteral significance. "If we have the same goals and I do it faster, you can also say atropelamento," Alba said: one person crushed by another's ambition. It was a word that signified conflict and conquest, thd victory of the strong over the weak, the swift over the slow. It seemed apt.

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keithmalek
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keithmalek

According to one estimate, cars hit as many as twenty-five million monarch butterflies every year.

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keithmalek

According to one analysis, insects are going extinct eight times faster than mammals, reptiles, and birds; per the same study, the world loses 2.5 percent of its insect mass every year.

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Suet624 Oh brother. 14mo
SamAnne Keith— awhile ago you asked me what other books Goldfarb had written. He just has the two. I worked with him when he was a freelance writer and writing for High Country News. He did great reporting of Columbia- Snake salmon issues, an issue I worked on for years. The science, history and politics are complex and he picked the issue up so quickly. In the 90s I worked on protecting national roadless areas. Can‘t wait to get to this book. 13mo
keithmalek @SamAnne Yes. It's VERY good! 13mo
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keithmalek
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Reintroducing cougars to the Northeast could prevent 700,000 deer-vehicle collisions and 155 driver deaths over thirty years.

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keithmalek
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In Costa Rica, jaguars have been lured through underpasses with Obsession, a Calvin Klein perfume that purportedly sets a "sexy, provocative mood."

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keithmalek
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A more recent estimate roughly doubled those figures to more than 59,000 injuries and 440 deaths.

keithmalek These statistics are alarming, but the author goes on to say that 96% of motorists who hit a deer do so without sustaining an injury. 14mo
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keithmalek
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I live in NYC, so I don't drive. But if I did, I would want someone to cut me off in traffic so that I could call them a flivverboob."

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keithmalek
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keithmalek

That roads threaten animals is ironic, for it was animals who inscribed the first etchings on the palimpsest that is America's road network. Many of our best-used roads began as wildlife trails--often bulldozed by bison--that solidified into Native American footpaths.

SamAnne Love Ben Goldfarb! 14mo
keithmalek @SamAnne Other than the beaver book (which I haven't read) what else did he write? 14mo
SamAnne @keithmalek I worked with him when he was a journalist, working for High Country News. For 2 decades I worked on river restoration, salmon recovery, specifically on getting the lower Snake River dams removed in eastern WA, to restore salmon in the Columbia/Snake Rivers. Ben did spot on reporting, got a quick handle on an issue with complex history, politics and science. So glad he is writing books and getting all the kudos. He deserves it. 14mo
keithmalek @SamAnne Wow! He (and you) are very interesting. 14mo
2 likes4 comments
review
Hooked_on_books
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Crossings explore how roads have impacted wildlife as well as what mitigation strategies have been successful. This is such a good book! It could have been super dry, but Goldfarb is such an engaging writer that it gets an enthusiastic 5 ⭐️ rating from me! His previous book Eager, about beavers, is just as good.

ChaoticMissAdventures Interesting topic, I spent part of the summer in Western Canada, BC and Alberta and Alberta has put a ton of resources into over and under highway pathways for wildlife, which seems to be drastically reducing accidents. 1y
Hooked_on_books @ChaoticMissAdventures Yes! That‘s one of the things he talks about. They end up saving money from the drastic reduction in collisions, and, of course, the animals then survive. They‘ve been a big success story in a lot of places. They have to figure out what kind of crossing each animal type needs in order for them to be effective. Super interesting. 1y
Librarybelle Oh! Stacking! 1y
47 likes4 stack adds3 comments