Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs
Volume 3 (1979) The Endangered Species: A Symposium
Free print copies of this volume are available by request to wnan@byu.edu
Front Matter
Articles
Introductory remarks
Joseph R. Murphy
The epoch of biotic impoverishment
Thomas E. Lovejoy
Culture and species endangerment
Roland C. Clement
Perspective
John L. Spinks
The law and its economic impact
Donald A. Spencer
Endangered and threatened fishes of the West
James E. Deacon
Rare aquatic insects, or how valuable are bugs?
Richard W. Baumann
Endangered and threatened plants of Utah: a case study
Stanley L. Welsh
Management programs for plants on federal lands
Duane Atwood
Strategies for preservation of rare plants and animals
G. Ledyard Stebbins
Strategies for the preservation of rare plants
Arthur H. Holmgren
Strategies for the preservation of rare animals
Clayton M. White
Rare species as examples of plant evolution
G. Ledyard Stebbins
Some reproductive and life history characteristics of rare plants and implications of management
K. T. Harper
The importance of bees and other insect pollinators in maintaining floral species composition
V. J. Tepedino
Endangered species: costs and benefits
Edwin P. Pister
Endangered species on federal lands. Panel: Part II, Forest service philosophy of endangered species management
Jerry P. McIlwain
Endangered species on federal lands. Panel: Part III, The Bureau of Land Management's endangered species program
Richard Vernimen
Endangered species on federal lands. Panel: Part IV, Summary of the endangered plant program in the Bureau of Land Management
Kenneth G. Walker
End Matter
Full Issue

Editors
- Editor
- Stephen L. Wood
- Editorial Board
- Kimball T. Harper
- Wilmer W. Tanner
- Stanley L. Welsh
- Clayton M. White