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literarysara 's review for:
Crossings: How Road Ecology Is Shaping the Future of Our Planet
by Ben Goldfarb
informative
medium-paced
I got interested in road ecology during my field trips last summer, so of course I eagerly anticipated this book. Its topics were more wide-ranging than I expected–there was a chapter I loved on benefits and challenges of planting milkweed by roadsides to provide food and habitat to monarch butterflies, but there were also chapters on the history of Americas roads, a great many chapters about roadkill and various mitigation strategies such as wildlife crossings, and some tantalizing trivia about noise pollution and necrophages. It was a serendipitous read for this month, when my volunteer group has been doing water testing to check chloride levels in waterways before and after snowfall and road salting. I wrote a little about it for our newsletter, and learned that the amount of salt we use on roads in the US has doubled since the 1970s. That’s partly because there are more roads, but also because the roads are open all the time and there is the expectation that snow and ice won’t slow down travel or commerce. That’s what’s interesting to me… the ways in which we treat a road as a right and a fact, while we consider environmental phenomena like snow and animal migrations to be inconveniences (if we consider them at all). I did really appreciate this book and do recommend it, although I also complained to friends about the writing style (a little contrived, especially in the beginning, or perhaps I just got used to it).