Prologue
Michael Soukup
© 2006 The George Wright Society. All rights reserved. This article was first published in The George Wright Forum, the GWS's journal of parks, protected areas, and cultural sites. For more information, visit www.georgewright.org.
- A second park management task would be to know how these resources interact with their world
and with each other. Thomas Jefferson apparently understood this, opining “For if one link
in nature’s chain might be lost, another might be lost, until the whole of things might
vanish by piecemeal.” We must understand these links.
- The National Park Service thus owes a great deal to the pioneers that conceived and launched
our first All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory. In this case, the initiative of a few individuals
working in a national park have demonstrated world leadership in answering the intellectual challenge
of park management, and have made a tangible contribution to the preservation of biodiversity
through the practical pursuit of knowledge, education, and public enjoyment.
- This volume is one result of the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory in Great Smoky Mountains National Park—a remarkable effort that will benefit the future of our parks and our own particular species most of all.
Michael Soukup, Associate Director, Natural Resource Stewardship & Science, National Park Service, 1849 C Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20240, mike_soukup@nps.gov.
© 2006 The George Wright Society. All rights reserved. This article was first published in The George Wright Forum, the GWS's journal of parks, protected areas, and cultural sites. For more information, visit www.georgewright.org.

