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How Did Aldo Leopold Influence The Environmental Movement

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How Did Aldo Leopold Influence The Environmental Movement
Aldo Leopold
Influences on Today’s Environmental Movements “There are some who can live without wild things and some who cannot. I’m glad that I will not be young in a future without wilderness.” -Aldo Leopold
More than just an American author and scientist, Aldo Leopold was a(n) conservationist, forester, environmentalist, ecologist, and a Professor at the University of Wisconsin. Throughout Leopold’s life, he became very influential in the movement for wilderness preservation and the development of contemporary environmental ethics. Along with the various influential aspects he carried, Aldo Leopold also left behind a legacy of achievements for people to remember him by. Some include milestones such as, “he undertook the first large-scale game survey in the United States, was the author of the first textbook on game management, and became a founding member of the first academic department in wildlife management. Leopold incorporated concepts from plant and animal ecology as he worked to reform state and federal wildlife policy during a period of intense growth in knowledge of wild populations and concern over human interactions with those populations.” (Young, 2008)
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The difference in Aldo Leopold and other young boys, was his expertise in writing and observation linked with his passion for nature. Those types of characteristics together lead Leopold straight into a life of making a difference in the world through the study of ecology. After much hard work, Leopold earned a degree in forestry at Yale University, which also led Leopold in joining the United States Forestry Service where, “he began to see the land as a living organism and developed the concept of community. This concept became the foundation upon which he became the conservation’s most influential advocate.” (Wilderness.net,

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