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National Wildlife Magazine
Oct/Nov 2008, vol. 46 no. 6
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NWF's PhotoZone
Departments
Backyard Habitat
Greening Your Fall Garden Cleanup
By Janet Marinelli
Science Sleuths
Baffling the Bandits
By Molly Newman
About This Issue
Taking a Stand for Public Lands
By Mark Wexler, Editorial Director
Wild Encounters
The Case of the Terrorist Turkeys
By Les Line
Imperiled Species
A Poster Child for Global Warming
By Doreen Cubie
Action Report
How National Wildlife Federation Is Making a Difference
Book Review
By a Maine River: A Year of Looking Closely
NWF View
The Peddling of an Addiction
By Larry J. Schweiger, President and Chief Executive Officer
Very Hungry Caribou
A World Abuzz with Bees
Whales on the Rebound
Pigeons Recognize Selves—and Great Art
The Blackfly Connection
Good News and Bad

Features
Photograph from featured article
© REBECCA COOK (CORBIS); © SHAWN THEW (CORBIS)
Special Report: The Presidential Election
Senators John McCain and Barack Obama state their positions on some of the key conservation and environmental issues facing the United States today
Speeding the Swift Fox's Return
By Catharine Moser
A tribal program on the Fort Peck Reservation in Montana is among several efforts to reintroduce this diminutive canine to habitat where it has been wiped out
Photograph from featured article
© TED WOOD
Putting the “Public” Back in Public Lands
By Daniel Glick
An open letter to the next president from a Colorado journalist
Perilous Journeys
By Steve Kemper
Just as science begins to solve the mysteries of their seasonal comings and goings, many of the world’s migratory species are in sharp decline
Photograph from featured article
© ERWIN AND PEGGY BAUER (WILDSTOCK)
Why Is This Crocodile Smiling?
By Hannah Schardt
After being hunted to the edge of extinction, the American crocodile's U.S. population has rebounded to its highest level in more than a century
Photograph from featured article
© HEIDI AND HANS-JÜRGEN KOCH (MINDEN PICTURES)
Busy with Bees
By Michael Lipske
In Bavaria, a team of industrious scientists uses high-tech tools to study the secret lives of honeybees—work that could shed light on the pollinators’ mysterious disappearances
Elephant Crossing
Photograph by Frans Lanting
An African elephant strolls through the lobby of the Mfuwe Lodge in Zambia’s South Luangwa National Park
Photograph from featured article
© TUI DE ROY (Copying requires photographer's permission.)
Changing Places
By Tui De Roy
Only in New Zealand can you find parrots at home in the snow and penguins thriving in forests
Web exclusives Browse all web exclusives

Able to adapt to a variety of habitats and diets, gray squirrels are outcompeting native species in many areas

A long-time denizen of woodlands, the fisher is now showing up in New England suburbs and croplands

Biologists link larger swarms of insects to a cleaner, healthier environment

Adopt a moose! Adopt a grizzly bear! Adopt a polar bear!
Adopt a gray wolf! Adopt a Canada lynx! Adopt a desert tortoise!
Adopt a bison! Adopt an American goldfinch! Adopt a harp seal!
Adopt an orca! Adopt an otter! Adopt a Florida panther!

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