![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments
Diminishing oil supplies, global warming due to use of fossil
fuels, persistent strife in the Middle East, and increasing demands
for energy have led to the search for additional energy sources.
Many feel that a significant expansion of nuclear power will be
necessary to meet projected needs. However, although nuclear power
has been produced commercially for over thirty years, no country
has yet found a permanent solution for the disposal of high-level
nuclear waste. This book examines the complex political, legal, and
scientific issues relating to the disposal of that waste.
Professor van den Bosch of the University of California was one of the developers of Integrated Pest Management - the use of biological controls, improved pest knowledge and observation, and judicious application of chemicals only when absolutely necessary. His research often suggested that less or no pesticides should be applied, which made him the target of both open and clandestine attack from industry and government figures. In protest, he wrote this passionate account of what Ecology called 'the ultimate social disaster of: evolving pesticide-resistant insects, the destruction of their natural predators and parasites, emergent populations of new insect pests, downstream water pollution, atmospheric pollution, the 'accidental' killing of wildlife and people, and the bankruptcies of indigenous and small farmers.' As a new Introduction to this edition recounts, some lessening of dangerous overreliance on massive pesticide applications has been achieved since van den Bosch published this book in 1978 - partly as a result of its influence. But the structural problems he described remain. This book has thus become a classic, along with Rachel Carson's "Silent Spring".
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Landscape and Ecosystem Diversity…
Gary John Brierley, Xilai Li, …
Hardcover
Digital Arts - An Introduction to New…
Cat Hope, John Charles Ryan
Hardcover
R4,241
Discovery Miles 42 410
|