Poetry
Articles and Prose
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Grizzly Woman: Louisa Willcox Battles for Bears
The NRDC’s Senior Wildlife Advocate sits down with Sage to chat about the simple bear necessities of life.
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A Wolf in Wolf’s Clothing
How does Yale’s Peabody Museum prepare its specimens for presentation? Sage Magazine goes behind the scenes in the Peabody’s collection.
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A Ship Unsunk
A change in US policy on the disposal of retired Navy vessels signals a movement in the right direction. But we’ve still got miles to…
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We Have Seen The Enemy, And It Is Edible
Faced with an unsustainable food system and an invasive species crisis, some adventurous eaters are trying to kill two birds with one stone. Literally.
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Sylvia Earle, Marine Biology Bad-Ass
Oceans legend Sylvia Earle swings through Connecticut to talk about sustainable seas, the future of marine research, and the decline of bluefin tuna.
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Jewel in Jeopardy: Will Alaska’s Rainforests Be Spared The Axe?
The Tongass is the final remnant of a once-vast West Coast rainforest. Now timber companies are gunning to harvest even this enclave of old-growth wilderness.
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The Cleanest Catch
Connecticut oyster farmer Brendan Smith might just redefine what it means to fish sustainably. That is, if the hurricanes don’t get him first.
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Reading the bones: In the field with a depredation detective
Big cats kill a lot of livestock in India’s Kahna Reserve, provoking local herders to retaliate. Jennie Miller is using forensics, ecology, and satellite mapping…
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The Adventures of Shark Stanley and Friends: Official Book Release
Shark Stanley was already the star of a grassroots conservation campaign and an international celebrity. Now he’s the hero of a children’s book, too. Sage…
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Paying Their Way: Why Sharks Are Worth More Alive
The shark fin industry is worth billions of dollars every year. How can shark lovers compete against that kind of capital?
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The International Society of Tropical Foresters 2013 Photo Competition
Warm your bones and buoy your spirit with the year’s best tropical photographs, brought to you by the Yale Chapter of the ISTF.
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Can the Climate Movement Learn From Its Mistakes?
A new analysis by Yale law student Nate Loewentheil diagnoses the failures of cap-and-trade in 2010. Listen up, climate organizers.