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  • Flowers grow from plastic cups in the expansive roof garden of the government building of SEDUVI (Secretaria de Desarollo Urbano y Viviendo), or Secretary of Urban Living and Development in Mexico City, Mexico on June 18, 2008. The seven year old hydroponic installation, the first of its kind in Mexico, is responsible for most of the flowers used in Mexico City's expansive parks. All employees in the building are free to work one hour a day on the roof garden.
    080618_3762.JPG
  • A lone red ant grooms itself, wiping its antennae with its front legs on the shore of the Truckee River at Lockwood, near Reno, Nevada on February 16, 2010. The site is one of three properties so far restored in a nine-year, eight-and-a-half-mile, $20 million effort by the Nature Conservancy to revitalize the river ecosystem of the lower Truckee River.
    100216_9962.JPG
  • Lily Foster works with child volunteers at the Centro de Agricultura Urbana Romita, a public demonstration garden in Cuauhtemoc district, Mexico City, Mexico on June 19, 2008. The garden was established for holding community events and urban gardening workshops by the organization Sembradores Urbanos, an organization co-founded by Foster, an American now living in Mexico City.
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  • Lily Foster, an American who co-founded the local urban gardening organization Sembradores Urbanos, works on the hydroponics installation on the roof of her home in Mexico City, Mexico on June 19, 2008.
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  • Tree seller Angel Guerrero pushes his cart down a street in Condesa, a chic neighborhood of Mexico City, Mexico, on June 19, 2008.
    080619_4446.JPG
  • Plants grow from a toilet seat used as a planter outside the offices of the organization Azoteas Verdes (Green Roofs) in the Centro Cultural La Pyramide in Mexico City, Mexico on June 17, 2008. The organization promotes roof garden construction throughout the city, teaching workshops, collecting used containers and preparing compost from organic waste.
    080617_3215.JPG
  • Rodrigo Canavas, director of Azoteas Verdes (Green Roofs), poses with his demo garden on the roof of the Centro Cultural La Pyramide in Mexico City, Mexico on June 17, 2008. His organization promotes roof garden construction throughout the city, teaching workshops, collecting used containers and preparing compost from organic waste.
    080617_3119.JPG
  • Top view of trees killed by a bark beetle outbreak near Twisp Pass, North Cascades National Park, Washington. Bark beetle populations have exploded and caused massive devastation throughout the west since the late 1990s. Recent warmer winters have not been sufficiently severe to kill the native beetle and suppress its population growth.
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  • Top view of trees killed by a bark beetle outbreak near Twisp Pass, North Cascades National Park, Washington. Bark beetle populations have exploded and caused massive devastation throughout the west since the late 1990s. Recent warmer winters have not been sufficiently severe to kill the native beetle and suppress its population growth.
    051015_0178.JPG
  • Top view of trees killed by a bark beetle outbreak near Twisp Pass, North Cascades National Park, Washington. Bark beetle populations have exploded and caused massive devastation throughout the west since the late 1990s. Recent warmer winters have not been sufficiently severe to kill the native beetle and suppress its population growth.
    051015_0183.JPG
  • A fisheries biologist paddles down the Yakima River, near Cle Elum, Washington, during a USGS and NOAA fish habitat survey.
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  • The smoke from a prescribed burn lingers in a ponderosa pine forest in Kings Canyon National Park, California. Crews in the park undertake controlled fires to restore the natural fire cycle and prevent a dangerous accumulation of understory vegetation.
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  • Blur pan of young trees planted in the floodplain along the shore of the Truckee River at McCarran Ranch, near Reno, Nevada on February 16, 2010. The site is one of three properties so far restored in a nine-year, eight-and-a-half-mile, $20 million effort by the Nature Conservancy to revitalize the river ecosystem of the lower Truckee River.
    100216_9474.JPG
  • Detail of a cattail (Typha latifolia) in seed - important habitat for wetland birds - on the shore of the Truckee River at McCarran Ranch, near Reno, Nevada on February 16, 2010. The ranch is one of three properties so far restored in a nine-year, eight-and-a-half-mile, $20 million effort by the Nature Conservancy to revitalize the river ecosystem of the lower Truckee River.
    100216_9209.JPG
  • Wealthy Mexico City youth carry home the saplings they planted at an urban gardening workshop taught by the local organization Sembradores Urbanos at the Adidas store in Condesa, a chic neighborhood of Mexico City, Mexico on June 19, 2008. Such events allow Adidas to promote its new Grun products, made from natural and recycled materials, while allowing the organization to reach out to an upper class audience.
    080619_4591.JPG
  • Wealthy Mexico City youth plant saplings at an urban gardening workshop taught by the local organization Sembradores Urbanos at the Adidas store in Condesa, a chic neighborhood of Mexico City, Mexico on June 19, 2008. Such events allow Adidas to promote its new Grun products, made from natural and recycled materials, while allowing the organization to reach out to an upper class audience.
    080619_4534.JPG
  • Marianna Dellekamp, a fine art photographer and avid urban gardener, enjoys the roof garden with her dog at her home in Condesa, a chic neighborhood of Mexico City, Mexico, on June 19, 2008.
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  • Marianna Dellekamp, a fine art photographer and avid urban gardener, works on the roof garden at her home in Condesa, a chic neighborhood of Mexico City, Mexico, on June 19, 2008.
    080619_4337.JPG
  • Gardener Jose Razo waters plants on the roof of CICEANA (Centro de Información y Comunicación Ambiental de Norte América), or Centre for Information and Environmental Communication of North America, set in the Viveros de Coyoacan (Coyoacan Nurseries) in Mexico City, Mexico on June 18, 2008. CICEANA's mission is to promote sustainable development and stimulate initiatives to solve and prevent environmental problems.
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  • Coworkers at SEDUVI (Secretaria de Desarollo Urbano y Viviendo), or Secretary of Urban Living and Development, socialize during their break on the expansive roof garden of the government building in Mexico City on June 18, 2008. The seven year old hydroponic installation, the first of its kind in Mexico, is responsible for most of the flowers used in Mexico City's expansive parks. All employees in the building are free to work one hour a day on the roof garden.
    080618_3789.JPG
  • Employees at SEDUVI (Secretaria de Desarollo Urbano y Viviendo), or Secretary of Urban Living and Development, Araceli Maya and Mayta Landa (l-r), work among the flower pots on the expansive roof garden of the government building on June 18, 2008. The seven year old hydroponic installation, the first of its kind in Mexico, is responsible for most of the flowers used in Mexico City's expansive parks. All employees in the building are free to work one hour a day on the roof garden.
    080618_3759.JPG
  • Rodrigo Canavas, left, director of Azoteas Verdes (Green Roofs), convinces a mechanic to let him collect used car tires from his shop in Mexico City, Mexico on June 17, 2008. The organization promotes roof garden construction throughout the city, teaching workshops, collecting used containers and preparing compost from organic waste.
    080617_3239.JPG
  • A plant grows from a toilet seat used as a planter outside the offices of the organization Azoteas Verdes (Green Roofs) in the Centro Cultural La Pyramide in Mexico City, Mexico on June 17, 2008. The organization promotes roof garden construction throughout the city, teaching workshops, collecting used containers and preparing compost from organic waste.
    080617_3208.JPG
  • Rodrigo Canavas, director of Azoteas Verdes (Green Roofs), poses with his demo garden on the roof of the Centro Cultural La Pyramide in Mexico City, Mexico on June 17, 2008. His organization promotes roof garden construction throughout the city, teaching workshops, collecting used containers and preparing compost from organic waste.
    080617_3162.JPG
  • A spider on its web in Manu National Park, Madre de Dios, Peru.
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  • Marianna Dellekamp, a fine art photographer and avid urban gardener, makes pesto from basil and peppers picked from the roof garden at her home in Condesa, a chic neighborhood of Mexico City, Mexico, on June 19, 2008.
    080619_4409.JPG
  • Flowers grow from plastic cups in the expansive roof garden of the government building of SEDUVI (Secretaria de Desarollo Urbano y Viviendo), or Secretary of Urban Living and Development in Mexico City, Mexico on June 18, 2008. The seven year old hydroponic installation, the first of its kind in Mexico, is responsible for most of the flowers used in Mexico City's expansive parks. All employees in the building are free to work one hour a day on the roof garden.
    080618_3938.JPG
  • Alberto Favela, right, garden coordinator at SEDUVI (Secretaria de Desarollo Urbano y Viviendo), or Secretary of Urban Living and Development, inspects the health of lettuce seedlings in the expansive roof garden of the government building in Mexico City, Mexico on June 18, 2008. The seven year old hydroponic installation, the first of its kind in Mexico, is responsible for most of the flowers used in Mexico City's expansive parks. All employees in the building are free to work one hour a day on the roof garden.
    080618_3846.JPG
  • Potted flowers stand on a desk in an empty office in Mexico City, Mexico on June 17, 2008.
    080617_3339.JPG
  • The Mars Petcare US factory at dawn on the shores of the Truckee River near Reno, Nevada on February 16, 2010. The disrupted ecology of the lower Truckee River is the focus of a nine-year, eight-and-a-half-mile, $20 million restoration effort by the Nature Conservancy.
    100216_8962.JPG
  • The heavily regraded shore of the Truckee River near Reno, Nevada on February 16, 2010. The disrupted ecology of the lower Truckee River is the focus of a nine-year, eight-and-a-half-mile, $20 million restoration effort by the Nature Conservancy.
    100216_9048.JPG
  • Curled leaves of a shrub growing on the shore of the Truckee River near Reno, Nevada on February 16, 2010. The disrupted ecology of the lower Truckee River is the focus of a nine-year, eight-and-a-half-mile, $20 million restoration effort by the Nature Conservancy.
    100216_9006.JPG
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