Special Places The Changing Ecosystems of the Toronto Region
Roots, Betty I., Chant, Donald A., Heidenreich, Conred E. Publisher: UBC Press, Vancouver, Canada Year Published: 1999 Pages: 342pp ISBN: 0-7748-0735-0 Library of Congress Number: QH106.2.O5S63 1999 Dewey: 508.713'541 Resource Type: Book
Special Places explores the changing ecosystem of the Toronto area over the past century, looking at the environmental conditions that influence the whol region and at the surprising range of plants and animals you can find in many of its natural spaces.
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Table of Contents
Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction
Part I: The Broad Physical Basis 1. The Physical Setting: A Story of Changing Environments through Time 2. Climate 3. Watersheds
Part II: From Wilderness to City 4. Native Settlement to 1847 5. Spatial Growth
Part III: The Past and Present Natural Environment 6. Ecology, Ecosystems, and the Greater Toronto Region 7. Vascular Plants 8. Mosses, Liverworts, Hornworts, and Lichens 9. Fungi 10. Invertebrates 11. Insects 12. Fish 13. Amphibians and Reptiles 14. Mammals 15. Birds
Part IV: The Special Places 16. From Acquisition to Restoration: A History of Protecting Toronto's Natural Places 17. Special Places
Waterfront Ecosystems: Restoring is Remembering The Port Lands: The significance of the Ordinary Scarborough Bluffs The Savannahs of High Park Oak Ridges Moraine Credit River Humber Valley Don Valley Duffins Creek Rouge Valley
18. Discussion and Conclusions The History of the Royal Canadian Institute
Afterword References and Additional Reading Contributors' Acknowledgments Contributors Index
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