Portfolio: featured

We’re Not in Zone 6 Anymore

We’re Not in Zone 6 Anymore Organic Gardening Magazine, August / September 2010

Climate change may increase the likelihood of summer droughts or leaf-shredding hailstorms, but individual weather events will determine our tomato harvests.

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Changing Climate, Shifting Forests

Changing Climate, Shifting Forests American Forests Magazine, Winter 2010

Ultimately, climate change will draw new lines between species and ecosystems. Some changes may be subtle and hard to notice, such as the gradual decline of coastal redwood forests over the coming centuries. Other changes will be hard to miss. . . .

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Virginia’s Changing Coasts

Virginia’s Changing Coasts Virginia Wildlife, January 2010

Rising seas, raging storms, and damaging flood waters that seem to never recede. Submerged houses. Eroded barrier islands. Such coastal horrors may be reminiscent of New Orleans, but the bayou is not the only coastal region that should be paying close attention to climate change and its associated threats.

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Finding the Silver Lining

Finding the Silver Lining Smithsonian Zoogoer, May / June 2009

Clouded leopards are reluctant partners in their own salvation. Difficult, secretive, and unlike any other cat, they defy most scientists’ attempts to understand them and, possibly, save them.

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Stalking Morels

Stalking Morels Flavor Magazine, April / May 2009

When Amy Goins offered to take me hunting for morels, the caveat was that I’d need to travel blindfolded in the trunk of the car. She told me she was kidding—sort of. The truth is that avid morel hunters are fiercely protective of their favorite spots and aren’t likely to reveal their secrets to anyone. . . .

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National Zoo Celebrates Birth of Rare Clouded Leopards

National Zoo Celebrates Birth of Rare Clouded Leopards Smithsonian.com, March 2009

Rarely has a birth been so anticipated, or the wait so suspenseful. On March 24, for the first time in 16 years, the Smithsonian’s National Zoo’s Conservation and Research Center celebrated the birth of clouded leopard cubs. . . .

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Bio

Cristina Santiestevan is an environmental writer and communications consultant. She writes about issues as varied as clouded leopards in Thailand, climate change in American forests and mushroom foraging in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Her work appears in magazines, museum exhibits and nonprofit publications.

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