23 Must-Read Science Books About the Environment, Chosen by 美姬社区 Scientists

While we know you wish you could, you can鈥檛 spend every week on an 美姬社区 expedition. In the time between your trips, you can still take actions in and around your home to support nature and help the environment. And immersing yourself in some of the best science books written about the environment can help you expand your horizons and stay engaged with the conservation movement.

So we asked several 美姬社区 scientists and staff to share their favorite scientific reads, especially those with an environmental focus, and explain the impact these volumes had on them. Here are their picks for some of the best science books.

by Aldo Leopold 

鈥淚 first read this book in high school, in the 1980s, and again every couple of years since then,鈥 says Stan Rullman, Ph.D., director of research at 美姬社区. 鈥淟eopold鈥檚 poetic observations of the natural world have sparked many fields of ecological study 鈥攁 large percentage confirming Leopold鈥檚 hypotheses鈥攁nd have inspired many more students and ecologists to help figure out how nature works. It should be required reading for every student, teacher, politician, and voter.鈥&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;

by Naomi Klein

Rullman says this should be another mandatory read for politicians and economists, and maybe everyone else. 鈥淭hough the current COVID-19 crisis is somewhat tangential to the climate crisis, what we are learning about how incredibly fragile our global Jenga-conomy is to disruptions should be a wake-up call for the looming elephant-in-the-china-shop calamity that our rapidly changing climate portends,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ith passion and eloquence and a grounding in strong science, Naomi tells us we need to change our ways.鈥&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;

How to Be a Good Creature, one of the best science books recommended by 美姬社区 scientists

by Sy Montgomery

鈥淚 was first introduced to Sy鈥檚 incredible writing when I picked up years ago,鈥 says Alix Morris, 美姬社区鈥檚 director of communications. 鈥淚 was riveted. The way she explores the consciousness of creatures is profound, reminding us how much we still have to learn about the world around us.鈥

In the opening of her book , Montgomery attributes her impressive career as a science writer and naturalist to 美姬社区, and details her first expedition following emus in the Australian Outback. 鈥淪y shows us how much we can learn from creatures, how to see and hear the wild world in new ways, and how to better understand and appreciate our place in this universe. Combine this with a heavy dose of humor and poetic prose and you have yourself a fantastic read.鈥

or by David Quammen

鈥淒avid Quammen has a knack for taking complex scientific concepts and melting them down and wordsmithing them back into a more accessible and understandable story,鈥 Rullman says. 鈥淗is approach to character development rivals the best novelists, yet his characters are usually vanguard scientists whose discoveries continue to push our understanding of how nature works.鈥 

Song of the Dodo is perhaps Quammen鈥檚 most eloquent work, Rullman says, offering a look at 鈥渋sland biogeography and why insular ecosystems are prone to extinctions.鈥 But Quammen鈥檚 2012 book Spillover is another great choice given our present pandemic, he adds. 鈥淚t explores several of the historic and emerging pandemics that arise from us releasing viruses, bacteria, parasites, etc., from the somewhat contained ecosystems where they evolved. The subtitle says it all: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic.鈥&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;

by Henry David Thoreau 

In the 1840s, Henry David Thoreau spent more than two years living a quiet naturalist鈥檚 life on Walden Pond in the woods of Concord, Mass. His thoughtful reflection on that time is available for , and has inspired environmentalists in three centuries. 

鈥淭horeau has inspired much of my scientific career,鈥 says Abraham Miller-Rushing, Ph.D., who leads the 美姬社区 expedition Climate Change: Sea to Trees at Acadia National Park. Thoreau鈥檚 work, including his journal, is particularly relevant at a time when travel is limited, Miller-Rushing says. 鈥淗e emphasized knowing intimately the nature right around you, seeing things that most people miss, and drawing inspiration from everyday natural events.鈥 

The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert - Best Science Books about Nature and the Environment

by Edward O. Wilson and by Elizabeth Kolbert 

Start this one-two punch with E.O. Wilson鈥檚 The Diversity of Life. 鈥淸It鈥檚] a glorious examination on biodiversity by a biologist recognized as 鈥榯he father of biodiversity,鈥欌 Rullman says. Not to mention biogeography 鈥攊n fact, Wilson was a prominent character in Song of the Dodo 鈥 sociobiology, and ant ecology. 鈥淓ven at 90 years old, he鈥檚 not finished. So read his book first, then fast-forward nearly a quarter of a century to Elizabeth Kolbert鈥檚 thoughtful Pulitzer Prize-winning treatment on biodiversity and its snowballing and disruptive loss,鈥 Rullman says. 

鈥淥ur understanding of the impacts of our changing climate were still theoretical and embryonic when Wilson wrote The Diversity of Life,鈥 Rullman adds, 鈥渂ut based on what has been learned in the decades in between, Kolbert uncovers the increasing evidence that the diversity of life is plummeting, even as temperatures and CO2 levels are rising.鈥 

It鈥檚 a topic Kolbert also tackled well in her 2006 book 鈥 a top pick of 美姬社区 director of scientific initiatives Mark Chandler, Ph.D., who also recommends Wilson鈥檚 more recent . Among Chandler鈥檚 other favorites are by Terry Tempest Williams and by Bill McKibben.

by Adrian Forsyth and Ken Miyata

This essay collection also comes recommended by both Chandler and Rullman. 鈥淏ack when I was taking middle school students on explorations into Central and South America鈥檚 rainforests, this book was our introduction to those complex ecosystems,鈥 Rullman says. When he started including adults on those expeditions, he reached for the same book. 鈥淭hough some of it is now a bit dated, it鈥檚 still one of the best introductions to neotropical ecology out there. Strong science and playfully written, it holds your attention while you鈥檙e packing your bags to go!鈥  

by William Stolzenburg

鈥淚鈥檓 glad this book came out after my general exam process in grad school, or I likely would have been accused of plagiarism,鈥 Rullman says. With a carefully crafted journalistic story arc, Stolzenburg lays out why large carnivores are important to the functioning of the ecosystems within which they live 鈥 and what happens when they disappear. 鈥淗is character cast is one of the most exciting in all of ecology, and their collective contributions to keystone species, trophic cascades and the ecology of fear have reshaped our understanding of the complex nature of predator-prey relationships.鈥  

Rullman says the essence of the book can be captured by two lines found within it. The first is by Jim Estes, one of the book鈥檚 main characters: 鈥Carnivorous animals are important. We have to stop thinking of them as passengers on this earth and start thinking of them as drivers.鈥 The other is by the author himself: 鈥Here was evidence that the biggest and scariest of carnivores were more dangerous by their absence.鈥

鈥淚 have photos of my daughter as a toddler looking at Maurice Sendak鈥檚 Where the Wild Things Are while I am holding up this one,鈥 Rullman says. 鈥淎nd then we switched, and when I saw the resulting image, I pledged to dedicate my life to ensuring that there will always be places for wild places and wild things for her and her generation to enjoy 鈥 even if they are the yodeling choruses of coyotes in the suburbs, pollinator gardens to support community vegetable gardens, and peregrines hunting in the steep canyons of our cities.鈥 

Stan Rullman and daughter reading Where the Wild Things Were and Where the Wild Things Are

美姬社区 science director Stan Rullman reading with his daughter. 


 

by Kim Stanley Robinson 

鈥淚t can be tough to really visualize what life might be like if climate change continues for another 100+ years,鈥 Miller-Rushing says. 鈥淭his climate fiction novel paints a vivid picture of one possible, admittedly extreme, future.鈥 (You might also check out Robinson's latest essay on climate change in the New Yorker, entitled '')

by Richard Alley 

Described by Publishers Weekly as 鈥渁 brilliant combination of scientific thriller, memoir, and environmental science,鈥 this book is 鈥渁 great layman synopsis of what climate is and how the numerous cycles at play create glacials, interglacials, and the current Anthropocene epoch,鈥 says Steven Mamet, Ph.D., principal investigator on Climate Change in the Mackenzie Mountains. 鈥淚 was fascinated by how well Dr. Alley could distill such a complex topic into something even I could understand.鈥 

wildlife spotted during Dr. Mamet's expedition Climate Change in the Mackenzie Mountains

Canada's Mackenzie Mountains, where Dr. Steve Mamet leads an 美姬社区 expedition studying the impact of climate change. Photo by Emma Fowler.


 

the beak of the finch, one of our picks for best science books about nature and the environment

 by Jonathan Weiner

In 1994, Rullman led his first trip to the Gal谩pagos Islands. 鈥淚 prepped with all the recommended readings, from Charles Darwin to Michael Jackson (not the Michael Jackson you鈥檙e thinking of). And I grabbed a fresh-off-the-press book called The Beak of the Finch that told the story of biologists Peter and Rosemary Grant鈥檚 decades on one tiny little island (Daphne Major), studying several species within the group of birds that now collectively bear Darwin鈥檚 name 鈥 the 13 species of finches that live throughout the archipelago,鈥 he says. 

鈥淲hile Darwin speculated that very small changes in physical attributes might enhance survival just enough to give an organism a slightly higher chance of having their genes passed down to their offspring, the Grants found such shifts can be measurable and in response to the oscillations between El Ni帽os and La Ni帽as and the weather patterns that accompany each. This is a wonderful introduction to natural selection and evolution, and also serves as a portal to a ton of other amazing books on this topic.鈥

and by Edward Abbey

鈥淚 worked at a guest ranch high in the mountains of Colorado in between high school and college, and traded one of the ranch hands my copy of Zen in the Art of Archery for Ed Abbey鈥檚 Desert Solitaire,鈥 Rullman recalls. He was unfamiliar with Abbey鈥檚 works at the time, but that single book proved to be a gateway 鈥 鈥渢o an entire shelf dedicated to Abbey, his irreverent perspective on mainstream culture, his intolerance of ignorance, and his passion for the wild desert southwest. He鈥檚 not for everyone, and at times, not even for me. But I still miss his fire, and whenever I need my commitment to conservation and preservation restoked, I light up one of his books.鈥 

The Balance of Nature - best science books

by John Kricher

Rullman calls Kricher, a former 美姬社区-supported scientist, 鈥渁 wonderful professor (recently retired) and a brilliant ecologist,鈥 whose many volumes take up considerable real estate on his bookshelves. 鈥淲ith this book, he provides a thorough and eloquent 鈥榟istory of ecology for a lay audience鈥 鈥 by itself a valuable contribution to the literature 鈥 but in doing so, he dismantles the long-held framework that there is a true balance of nature, a fulcrum upon which all that we know is statically poised,鈥 Rullman explains.

鈥淚nstead, he promotes a term more favored by ecologists: dynamic equilibrium, which better allows for change, adaptiveness, resiliency and, well, some degree of wobble," Rullman continues. "Another mandatory read for decision makers 鈥 and, heck, we are all decision makers in some sense, so a must-read for everyone!鈥  

by Jack Turner  

This book found Rullman at just the right time, he says. 鈥淚 often struggle with rants, even those from people whose views align pretty much with my own. But sometimes I need them 鈥 someone putting themselves out there and taking a stand. Ed Abbey certainly did that. David Brower did as well. Wendell Barry鈥檚 gentle manifestos are often just as passionate, though not rantful. And this little but powerful book popped into my life when many of the intrinsic values of wild places were being replaced by more economic metrics, and at that time in my life, I didn鈥檛 want wild nature to be reduced to numbers,鈥 he explains.

鈥淚 now see this as more of an 鈥榓nd鈥 than an 鈥榦r,鈥 and that wildness is hopefully big enough to accommodate both views. The day that it isn鈥檛 big enough for this pluralism of values will be a very sad day, as it will mean we have officially lost too much.鈥

by Eugene Linden

This 2007 book chronicles the historical clashes between cultures and climate in societies from arctic Greenland to the Fertile Crescent to the ancient Mayan cities of Central America. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about the rise and fall of civilizations around water supplies,鈥 Mamet says. 鈥淚 feel it鈥檚 timely given the dire water situation in South Africa and a reminder that we can鈥檛 engineer away all of our environmental problems鈥攃hange at the individual level is necessary.鈥 

 

And of course, there are dozens, if not hundreds, more great books about science, nature, and conservation. What are your favorites? Share your picks with us on , , or .

Affiliate disclosure: As a participant in the Amazon Associates program, 美姬社区 may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases made through links in this post. 

 

 

sunrise at Acadia National Park

 

 

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