All,
My daughter has informed me that there were articles in the Philadelphia Inquirer the last two days on the pines. I did not get the paper so does anyone have any insight into what they were about?
Here is the first paragraph from the Inquirer website.
Source: Wendy Ginsberg INQUIRER SUBURBAN STAFF
The loud croaks of bullfrogs and pickerel frogs would normally cause an environmentalist to smile.But not this time.A 10-year study of the state's ecologically important Mullica River Basin shows that development in the area has affected the soil and water. The result: the intrusion of plant and animal species that are not native to the unique ecosystem of the 1.1 million-acre Pinelands reserve."This is like they have a 500-pound gorilla and they're not talking about
Guy
My daughter has informed me that there were articles in the Philadelphia Inquirer the last two days on the pines. I did not get the paper so does anyone have any insight into what they were about?
Here is the first paragraph from the Inquirer website.
Source: Wendy Ginsberg INQUIRER SUBURBAN STAFF
The loud croaks of bullfrogs and pickerel frogs would normally cause an environmentalist to smile.But not this time.A 10-year study of the state's ecologically important Mullica River Basin shows that development in the area has affected the soil and water. The result: the intrusion of plant and animal species that are not native to the unique ecosystem of the 1.1 million-acre Pinelands reserve."This is like they have a 500-pound gorilla and they're not talking about
Guy