Friday, February 6, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, February 6, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five it rir I ww nw > Environment: Of marshes and men' { The Honorable Kamal Monsour First Druz Candidate to the Israel Knesset (Parliament) By JACK EICHENBAUM John and Mildred Teal, Life and Death of the Salth Marsh, Little, Brown and Co. $7.95. Now that Mother Earth is increasingly supplanting Moth- erhood as the safe issue of American politicians, the en- vironmentally concerned are subjected to more and more "in- formation" pollution. The pol- luters are sometimes ignored and lying out of vested interest. Fortunately, the writings of John and Mildred Teal, effec- t vely supplemented by the d awings of Richard Fish, serve admirably as a kind of marsh land information pollution con- trol at present. I hope they will also be used as a source for ideas on marsh land enhance- ment in the future. Mr. and Mrs. Teal have writ- ten about the salt marsh-the low, wet, grassy land generally found between the inland high tide mark and the barrier beach- es of the Eastern coast of North America. Despite the proximity of salt marshes to the large population along the Atlantic .seaboard, they are seldom fre- quented and poorly understood by most. People who do visit and use the marsh are likely to be eradicative agents: land fill developers, marina magnates, dredging fiends, pesticide users, and industrial and civil garbage dumpers. As it stands, nature' '' lovers, commercial and sports fishermen, hunters, and natu- ralists concerned with future human needs - those who re- quire the preservation of the unique marsh land ecology-are in a power minority. Life and Death of the Salt Marsh gives an account of both of these human uses of the marsh as well as the ecological and geo- logical developments instru- mental in its being and becom- ing. The first part of the book serves to introduce the reader to the salt marsh. A short sen- sitive visit to the marsh is fol- lowed by a 'description of the genesis and subsequent changes occurring in a particular marsh in New England. Here geologi- cal and biological events since the retreat of the Laurentide Glacier, about 10,000 years ago, are blended with archaeological knowledge of Indian habitation and historical accounts docu- menting.. the settlement of a pioneer English family and their descendants. The result is a story, at first heavily depend- ent on geological and biological inference, 1 a t e r dramatically aided by social inference. While the style is somehow appealing in its simplicity and the con- tinuity is appreciated, the read- er lacks evidence or references to support such inferences as "One autumn (thousands of years ago) there was an unus- ually severe storm." Perhaps this is legitimate poetic license. It is in the second section of the book, dealing with the pres- ent day ecology of salt marshes, that the Teals are the most en- gaging. Indeed, much of the discussion is based on research they are best acquainted with. The differing geographical and geological coniditions which pre- vail in a latitudinal direction along the coast are related to the variations in biological adaptations a n d s e a s o n a l changes observed. Salt marshes are seen as a narrow zone of especially in- teresting geomorphic and or- ganic activity. Their soil and drainage depends on a delicate interaction between fresh water sediment deposits and ocean tides while the forms of life which inhabit them have had to become adapted to everchang- ing conditions of oxygen and nutrient availability, water level, salinity, light, and temperature. Survival of the salt marsh eco- logy is continually threatened by such relatively frequent hazards as extreme river flooding and hurricanes as well as major long term trends in climate and geology. Among the plants, the Spar- tina marsh grasses along most of the coast, and the mangrove booksblooksb Novel entertainments: trees in Florida, are the prin- cipal species. As ecological "do- minants," the Spartina are dis- cussed in considerable detail. They have evolved special feat- ures to adapt to the saline con- ditions, high evaporation rate, and mud oxygen shortage com- mon to salt marshes which frustrate the development of most plants. These remarkable mechanisms, combined with the productivity of various marsh algae, enable the marsh to be unsually productive of organic material. In fact they seem to produce at least twice as much, in terms of tonnage per acre per year, as any environment, at a comparable latitude. As with plants, there are re- latively few species of animals on the salt marsh, but those that adapted include some of the most interesting and tasty creatures known to man. The Teals tell of the extremely suc- cessful adaptive mechanisms of such pests as mosquitoes and biting flies, as well as the curious habits and physiology of snails, burrowing worms and mollusks, various crabs, and other shell- fish. Not surprisingly, the marsh and its nearby estuarine en- vironments are our only sup- pliers of clams, shrimp, lobster, crab, oysters, and various fish an Easterner sorely misses in Michigan. It is also an impor- tant gastronomic host to such visitors as raccoons, wrens, owls, and exotic waterfowl, and the extensive chain of marshes along the Atlantic provides food, and resting and nesting places for many species of migratory birds and fish. Marsh conservation is the subject of the final section. The Teals are staunch advocates for preserving the ribbon of coastal salt marshes, citing their current and potential value for managed food supply, their re- creational advantages, and their READ BOOKSBOOKSBOOA FRIDAYS utility in limiting mainland damage caused by sea flooding and wave action. On a less ob- viously pragmatic level, the marshes are defended for their uniqueness and the variety of organisms they support. Ecolo- gists have found that some of the adaptive features of unusual organisms may be of instruc- tive value to environmental man- agement. Moreover the diversity of natural environments can act as an effective buffer to the often locally monotonous and h e n c e calamity-prone I a n d- scapes shaped directly by human activities. As one would suspect, marsh destruction is proceeding al- armingly, particularly in recent decades and in the more pop- ulous areas. The Teals, however, do not take the extremist posi- tion, popular among some con- servationists, that modern man is simply no good for salt marshes. Nor do they take the rhetoric-steeped attitude that capitalist industry is the only bad guy. Instead they are quite capable of going beyond cate- gorical judgments; they cite conscientious and malicious pri- vate initiative as well as ef- fective and destructive public policy. This selectively critical view leads to an array of sug- gested solutions which are hu- mane to both humanity and the marsh and are implementable given a reasonable amount of money, a reshuffling of govern- mental power, public interest, and continued research. After reading the book I was pleased to see that the Teals did not want me out of their marsh -that human beings could be appreciated as positively inter- achting with "nature." An earlier statement about a in a n 1 e s s marsh-"The entire system has been constructed by natural se- lection so that it functions with great economy."-had essential- ly forewarned "No Trespass- ing!" It is encouraging to see the conservation-minded incor- porating man batk into nature, and I would hope that future research reflects this recogni- tion. Quite ironically, on a re- cent trip, I had tried to get to Sapelo Island, Georgia where, as it turns out, most of the salt marsh research has been done. A local boatman told me it was closed. Today's writers.. . Jack Eichenbaum t a u g h t chemistry in Switzerland and England before coming to the University; he is, presently a Doctoral Candidate in Geogra- phy. Melissa Alexander, a PBK- pinned housewife, consumes novels at a prodigious rate. SATURI ARAB CO-EXISTENCE AND INTEGRATION IN ISRAEL" DAY, FEB. 7 HILLEL LOU NGE-1429 Hill Street 8:30 P.M. <.,A.. A r . A z ..~u ., i .... . < _ ...x.X .&X. X-X.:.z'. . . . . __ i ', ', ti Sorority Speaks on: . C ;. ..E', Yk' ?'.:: S', ! ^ ;:::; : :'' v s< j : .. '. ,.S'\ i' i' i , I Open Rush Mass Mee ting Sun day, Feb, 8 E3 I i ii,? , s By MELISSA ALEXANDER Myles Eric Ludwig, Golem, Wey- bright and Talley, $6.95 Anthony Dekker, Temptation in a Private Zoo, Morrow, $5.95 TarJel Vesaas, The Birds, Mor- row, $5.00 Alexis Tolstoy, Vampires, Haw- thorne, $4.95 Golem: New York Jew, col- lege drop-out (what was he do- ing at the University of N. Car-. olina anyway?), pothead, phil-" osopher, "comic villain," sexual explorer, moral protagonist; in short, a "Hero for our Time." His existential adventures cul- minate in an explosive, Mor- gan-like scene during a Yom, :Kippur service. The novel con- tains some very funny bits on Americana - from 'tv "Super- market Sweepstakes" to N e w York Gurus - insights i n t o America as fiction ("a meta- phor for itself"), and lots of just plain, and not so plain, sex. The writing is often dense with ideas, sometimes ridicu- lously obtuse, in parts awkward and uneven, but in the main, startlingly original and success- ful. Norwegian Tarjei Vesaas has twice been nominated for a No- bel Prize. His novel The Birds reveals a strength and sensi- tivity which have distinguished his as o n e of Scandanavia's greatest living authors. Journ- eying into the doubting, super- sensitive and frightened mind of Mattis, callede "Simple Si- mon'' by the villagers, The Birds tells the bittersweet and tragic story of a man unable to cope, for everyone seems to him so much more "clever." Work- ing in the farmers' fields, he be- comes troubled and confused; only alone in the woods or row- ing on the lake can he relax and think clearly: he becomes the ferryman for a lake no one wants to cross. His final tragedy is precipitated by the potential loss of his sister, who has al- ways supported and protected him. The power of the novel lies in the utter simplicity and sym- pathy with which it is told. Reading Temptation in a Pri- vate Zoo is like going to a James Bond mdvie, only it takes long- er. The' novel, replete with girls outfitted to color-match the Jaguars they drive, a hero en- dowed with prodigious sexual prowess and raw nerve, a hero- ine as good-looking as she is clever and clean, and a villain with designs on the entire world, revolves around a pleas- ure weekend at a secluded man- sion, whose chief attraction is a restored bearcave, where murder, blackmail, and deceit lurk behind the extravagant trappings. Aside from some un- successful attempts at' flam- boyant writing and a few very obvious intrigues, this suspense novel is quick-moving, absorb- ing, and satisfying reading. When in paperback, it will be perfect for a boring plane trip or long hospital stay. Written by an elder cousin of the Tolstoy, the four stories in Vampires might have shivered the imagination of the good la- dies of 19th century Russian so- ciety, but they lack any real sense of foreboding and dread, or the kind of gripping horror, which might make them com- pelling for us now. They read like weird parlor dramas or Grimm's Tales a la Russe. Part of the problem lies in the fact that the author has failed to create living characters w i t h any more depth or reality than his phantoms have. Part of the problem lies in history, which removes from our realm of ex- perience the settings for most of the stories - 19th Century Russian salons and mansions, Serbian peasant h u ts; the worlds of the real and the sup- ernatural seem oddly similar, thus easing any sense we might have of invasion into our world by threatening and mysterious forces, 3529 SAB 7.00 p.m. *WAK am.hfC.i914114010 I Ouri br4 NO MISTAKE Far Est policy ings people together. 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