INd@X w THE YEAR IN REVIEW Features and departments published in Wildlife Conservation magazine in 2005. Abbreviations appearing before a colon refer to the issue in which that entry appears (J/F=January/February; M/A=March/April; M/J=May/June; J/A=July/August; S/O=September/Oc- tober; N/D=November/December). Numbers after a colon refer to page numbers. A-B Alderson, Doug, “Swamp Bears,” M/J:32-37 Allofs, Theo, “Caiman,” N/D:20-25 bears, grizzly, in Alaska, M/A:6-7, N/D:32-39; in Kamchatka, Rus- The Gulf fritillary is a common garden visitor in the southern half of the U.S. sian Far East, N/D:40-45; black, Now is a good time to start planning a garden to attract butterflies. in Florida, M/J:32-37 Behler, Deborah A., “Go Fish,” $/0:64 J/A:42-45 (Part I); $/0:44-47 Estabrook, Barry, “From Mongolia to Bergman, Charles, “Wild Places: The (Part II); N/D:46-49 (Part III) Manahatta,” $/O:32-39 Big Forest,” M/J:56-59 Cox, Vic, “Searching for Ellies,” Evans, Kirsten, “Ready... Set... birds, bee-eaters at Bronx Zoo, J/F:50- J/F:20-21 Go!,” S/O:8-10 51; oystercatchers, J/F:40-43; crocodiles, American, in Florida, Fay,J .M ichael, “MegaFlyover,” wood storks in Florida, M/A:48- V/A:46-49 S/O:26-31 49; breeding and migration sur- Cubie, Doreen, “Catching Oyster- fish bycatch, scheme to reduce in Gulf veys in Mongolia, M/J:6-7; horn- catchers,” J/F:40-43; “Wild Plac- of Alaska, M/A:32-35 bills in India, M/J:44-49; ravens, es: Isle of Whales,” J/A:52-54 Foley, Charles, “An Elephant Named J/A:36-41 Andy,” M/J:64 bonobo, in Democratic Republic of D Congo, N/D:26-31 Datta, Aparajita, “High on Hornbills,” G Breiter, Matthias, “Diver,” N/D:32-39 M/J:44-49 Goldstein, Howard, “Rocky,” Bronx Zoo, enriching lives for bee-eat- dogs, domestic, working for conser- VA:30-35 ers, J/F:50-51; new Butterfly Gar- vation through scat detection, Guynup, Sharon, “Turtle Triage,” den, M/J:28-31; Girls for Planet /F:34-39 M/A:36-41 Earth, J/A:50-51 Dollar, Tom, “Scat Dogs,” J/F:34-39 Butterfly Garden, new Bronx Zoo dolphin, Risso’s, first-ever rescue and H-I exhibit, M/J:28-31 release, J/A:30-35 Hart, Terese and Robert Mwinyihali, dugongs, in Indian Ocean, J/F:22-27 “Caught in the Crossfire: Part I,” Cc Dybas, Cheryl Lyn, “Requiem for the J/A:42-45; and Corneille Ewango, caimans, in Pantanal, N/D:20-25 Chesapeake,” M/A:26-31; “Wine “Caught in the Crossfire: Part II,” Chesapeake Bay, pollution and restora- and Wildlife,” J/A:22-29 S/O:44-47; and Richard Tshombe, tion of, M/A:26-31 “Caught in the Crossfire: Part III,” Coates, Karen J., “Life After Killer EF N/D:46-49 Waves,” M/A:8-9; “Wild Places: elephants, in South Africa, Greater Heller, Catherine, “Wild Places: A Return to Paradise,” M/A:50-53 Addo Elephant National Park, A Promise Kept,” S/O:50-53 Congo, DR, war and wildlife in, J/F:20-21 hornbills, in India, M/J:44-49 58 WILDLIFE CONSERVATION INd@X w THE YEAR IN REVIEW Features and departments published in Wildlife Conservation magazine in 2005. Abbreviations appearing before a colon refer to the issue in which that entry appears (J/F=January/February; M/A=March/April; M/J=May/June; J/A=July/August; S/O=September/Oc- tober; N/D=November/December). Numbers after a colon refer to page numbers. A-B Alderson, Doug, “Swamp Bears,” M/J:32-37 Allofs, Theo, “Caiman,” N/D:20-25 bears, grizzly, in Alaska, M/A:6-7, N/D:32-39; in Kamchatka, Rus- The Gulf fritillary is a common garden visitor in the southern half of the U.S. sian Far East, N/D:40-45; black, Now is a good time to start planning a garden to attract butterflies. in Florida, M/J:32-37 Behler, Deborah A., “Go Fish,” $/0:64 J/A:42-45 (Part I); $/0:44-47 Estabrook, Barry, “From Mongolia to Bergman, Charles, “Wild Places: The (Part II); N/D:46-49 (Part III) Manahatta,” $/O:32-39 Big Forest,” M/J:56-59 Cox, Vic, “Searching for Ellies,” Evans, Kirsten, “Ready... Set... birds, bee-eaters at Bronx Zoo, J/F:50- J/F:20-21 Go!,” S/O:8-10 51; oystercatchers, J/F:40-43; crocodiles, American, in Florida, Fay,J .M ichael, “MegaFlyover,” wood storks in Florida, M/A:48- V/A:46-49 S/O:26-31 49; breeding and migration sur- Cubie, Doreen, “Catching Oyster- fish bycatch, scheme to reduce in Gulf veys in Mongolia, M/J:6-7; horn- catchers,” J/F:40-43; “Wild Plac- of Alaska, M/A:32-35 bills in India, M/J:44-49; ravens, es: Isle of Whales,” J/A:52-54 Foley, Charles, “An Elephant Named J/A:36-41 Andy,” M/J:64 bonobo, in Democratic Republic of D Congo, N/D:26-31 Datta, Aparajita, “High on Hornbills,” G Breiter, Matthias, “Diver,” N/D:32-39 M/J:44-49 Goldstein, Howard, “Rocky,” Bronx Zoo, enriching lives for bee-eat- dogs, domestic, working for conser- VA:30-35 ers, J/F:50-51; new Butterfly Gar- vation through scat detection, Guynup, Sharon, “Turtle Triage,” den, M/J:28-31; Girls for Planet /F:34-39 M/A:36-41 Earth, J/A:50-51 Dollar, Tom, “Scat Dogs,” J/F:34-39 Butterfly Garden, new Bronx Zoo dolphin, Risso’s, first-ever rescue and H-I exhibit, M/J:28-31 release, J/A:30-35 Hart, Terese and Robert Mwinyihali, dugongs, in Indian Ocean, J/F:22-27 “Caught in the Crossfire: Part I,” Cc Dybas, Cheryl Lyn, “Requiem for the J/A:42-45; and Corneille Ewango, caimans, in Pantanal, N/D:20-25 Chesapeake,” M/A:26-31; “Wine “Caught in the Crossfire: Part II,” Chesapeake Bay, pollution and restora- and Wildlife,” J/A:22-29 S/O:44-47; and Richard Tshombe, tion of, M/A:26-31 “Caught in the Crossfire: Part III,” Coates, Karen J., “Life After Killer EF N/D:46-49 Waves,” M/A:8-9; “Wild Places: elephants, in South Africa, Greater Heller, Catherine, “Wild Places: A Return to Paradise,” M/A:50-53 Addo Elephant National Park, A Promise Kept,” S/O:50-53 Congo, DR, war and wildlife in, J/F:20-21 hornbills, in India, M/J:44-49 58 WILDLIFE CONSERVATION Human Footprint, Global Position- Who Kept Escaping,” M/A:42-47 ing System (GPS) map of human Schafer, Kevin, “Wild Places: Ascen- impact on Earth’s land masses, sion Island,” N/D:52-55 §/O0:32-39 Shakespeare, Margaret, “The Appren- tice,” J/A:58-59 J-L Shalant, Jenny, “Girls for Planet Jiwa, Hoslo, “Mermaid Mysteries,” Earth,” J/A:50-51; “Tropics of the J/F:22-27; “The Tsunami and the Americas,” N/D:50-51 Onge,” M/J:8-9 Sieswerda, Paul, “Inspired by Sea Tur- Johnson, Eric, “Behind Enemy Lines,” tles,” J/A:6-7 N/D:26-31 Silver, Scott, “Keeping Grizzlies Wild,” leopards, in South Africa, Phinda Pri- M/A:6-7 Dry Borders vate Game Reserve, M/A:42-47 Smith, Douglas W., “Meet Five, Nine, Great Natural Reserves of the Sonoran Desert Edited by Richard Stephen Felger and Bill Broyles Lewis and Clark, on their journey to and Fourteen,” J/F:28-33 the Pacific, J/F:44-49 storks, wood, in Florida, M/A:48-49 This evocative and informative excursion into the Lynam, Antony J., “Rain-forest Sonoran Desert along the U.S.-Mexico border Guardians,” N/D:8-9 T-U brings to life the beauty of a spare and seductive Tennesen, Michael, “It IS Rocket Sci- terrain, telling the stories of the people, plants, and politics that layer a landscape in need of M ence,” J/F:56; “It’s All Relative,” understanding and protection. Maher, Sue, “The Stork Club,” M/A:64; “Deep Divers,” M/J:38- M/A:48-49 43; “Birds in Black,” J/A:36-41 321 b&w photographs, 80 color photographs, mammals, marine, deep-diving studies, tigers, new reserve for in Myanmar, 27 illustrations, 5 maps M/J:38-43 §/O0:18-25 Paper $45.00 MegaFlyover, Mike Fay’s aerial survey tsunami, in Indian Ocean, December Also available in Cloth $80.00 of Africa, $/O:26-31 26, 2004, M/A:8-9 Mirsky, Steven, “Breath-taking,” turtles, in crisis in Southeast Asia, J/A:64 M/A:36-41; leatherbacks in Benin, Misner, Michael, “It Takes Guts,” West Africa, J/A:6-7 M/A:32-35 monkeys, spider, in Bolivia, $/O:8-10 V-Z Myanmar, conservation in, $/O:18-25 Weber, Bill, “Arctic Showdown,” S/O:6-7 N-P Wild Places: “South Africa’s Greater Nikolaenko, Vitaly, death of bear Addo Elephant National Park,” expert in Kamchatka, N/D:40-45 J/F:20-21; “Malaysia’s Perhentian Overby, Charlotte, “The Hellbender Islands,” M/A:50-53; “Ecuador’s Needs Help,” M/J:50-54 Jatun Sacha Biological Station,” oystercatcher, as indicator species for M/J:56-59; “Grand Manan Is- El Lobo health of coastal ecosystems, land in Bay of Fundy,” 1/A:52-54; Readings on the Mexican Gray Wolf V/E:40-43 “Heart of Africa (Rwanda and Edited by Tom Lynch Pacific Northwest, the conservation Uganda),” S/O:50-53; “Ascension challenge for WCS, J/F:44-49 Island,” N/D:52-55 After roaming the desert Southwest for wineries, California, impacts on wild- thousands of years, the Mexican gray wolf was, almost in the blink of an eye, driven to the brink Q-S life habitat, J/A:22-29 of extinction. Including essays by Aldo Leopold, Rabinowitz, Alan, “Guns, Gold, and wolf, restored to Yellowstone, tenth Rick Bass, and Sharman Apt Russell, E/ Lobo Greed,” S/O:18-25 anniversary, J/F:28-33 explores how this subspecies of wolf was ravens, J/A:36-41 Wolkomir, Richard and Joyce, “The brought so close to the edge of annihilation Raygorodetsky, Gleb, “The Last Bear,” Comeback Crocodiles,” J/A:46-49 N/D:40-45 Zack, Steve, “On the Heels of Lewis Paper $19.95 Repohl, Roger F., “The Birds and the and Clark,” J/F: 44-49 The University of Utah Press Bees,” J/F:50-51 Zahler, Peter, “On Being a Birder.. . (800) 621-2736 Ross, Gary Noel, “Finding Dream- or Not,” M/J:6-7; “To Burton and Order online from www.UofUpress.com land,” M/J:28-31 Back: The Role of Exploration in salamander, hellbender, M/J:50-54 Conservation,” S/O:14-16; “Foot- 5° The University Salzman, Scott, “Houdini: The Cat prints in the Snow,” S/O:40-43 ‘of Utah Press ~ NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2005 59