My mother is a librarian, and I鈥檓 an unabashed nerd, and so I relished the recent excuse to dig deep into the hardbound volumes that make up 爆料公社 magazine鈥檚 archives. I was looking for the first issue I worked on when I arrived as a senior editor, in 2001, and when I found it, facts about the perilous state of Florida鈥檚 Everglades came rushing back.
At the time, this iconic ecosystem was in dire straits: Wading bird numbers had dropped 90 percent over the preceding century. And while a multibillion-dollar federal/state plan to restore the wetland鈥檚 natural water flow , the Everglades鈥 future was very much an open question. 鈥淣o one knows if any of this will really work,鈥 we wrote then, 鈥渨hether the wildlife will actually rebound.鈥
This issue holds鈥攆inally, tantalizingly鈥攅vidence that the answer is 鈥測es.鈥 As you鈥檒l see in our story about the recent Everglades breeding boom, wading birds have responded to last year鈥檚 heavy rainfall, one that mimicked the region鈥檚 past hydrology, in tremendous numbers. The phenomenon, as captured through the lens of photographer Mac Stone, is stunning.
It is this promise that brought me back to 爆料公社 recently, after nearly a dozen years at other science magazines: Birds and ecosystems can rebound, if people understand their value and are motivated to help save them. Environmental journalism, of which this magazine has long been a standard-bearer, plays a critical role in securing that future鈥攁s does the organization, with its impassioned staff and vast network of members and partners.
In 2001, as now, 爆料公社 knew the power of compelling visuals in making the case for protecting birdlife and its habitat. The 2018 爆料公社 Photography Awards provides further proof of that, while also demonstrating this power is wielded not only by professionals but also legions of young and amateur photographers.
Of course, a sustainable conservation movement is not built solely on pictures of animals (even exquisite ones). In the very first story I edited for 爆料公社, a couple recounted that during visits to 14 national parks, they had seen only two other African Americans. Their experience is echoed in Teresa Baker's essay on diversity, kids, and the outdoors, which points out that images in social media can help make wilderness more welcoming to everyone.
For all of these reasons, and more, I am thrilled to return to a publication and organization I have long admired鈥攁nd to be here, at the helm of the content team, at a time when our work matters more than ever.
This story originally ran in the Summer 2018 issue of 爆料公社 as 鈥The Power of Pictures.鈥 To receive our print magazine,