Border Art

Continental Divide: Wildlife, People, and the Border Wall

There’s a new book coming out in October from Texas A&M University Press featuring photos and the story of our borderlands after the border wall. Photos and story by Krista Schlyer, a writer and photographer, and member of the International League of Conservation Photographers and the North American Nature Photographers Association. Foreword by Jamie Rappaport Clark Click here to order

Introduction by Texas A&M University Press:
The topic of the border wall between the United States and Mexico continues to be broadly and hotly debated: on national news media, by local and state governments, and even in coffee shops and over the dinner table. By now, broad segments of the population have heard widely varying opinions about the wall’s effect on illegal immigration, international politics, and the drug war.

But what about the wall’s effect on the Sonoran pronghorn antelope herds and the kit fox? On the Mexican gray wolf, the ocelot, the jaguar, and the bighorn sheep? In unforgettable images and evocative text, Continental Divide: Wildlife, People, and the Border Wall helps readers understand all that is at stake.

As Krista Schlyer explains, the remoteness of this region from most US citizens’ lives, coupled with the news media’s focus on illegal immigration and drug violence, has left many with an incomplete picture. As she reminds us, this largely isolated natural area, stretching from the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, hosts a number of rare ecosystems: Arizona’s last free-flowing river, the San Pedro; the grasslands of New Mexico, some of the last undeveloped prairies on the continent; the single most diverse birding area in the US, located along the lower Rio Grande River in Texas; and habitat and migration corridors for some of both nations’ most imperiled species. In documenting the changes to the ecosystems and human communities along the border while the wall was being built, Schlyer realized that the impacts of immigration policy on wildlife, on landowners, and on border towns were not fully understood by either policy makers or the general public. The wall not only has disrupted the ancestral routes of wildlife; it has also rerouted human traffic through the most pristine and sensitive of wildlands, causing additional destruction, conflict, and death—without solving the original problem.

Watch the trailer

KRISTA SCHLYER is a writer and photographer based in the Washington, DC, area. Her work has appeared in National Parks, Defenders, High Country News, Ranger Rick, National Geographic News, Audubon, and Outdoor Photographer. She is a member of the International League of Conservation Photographers and the North American Nature Photographers Association.

5 Comments

  1. thanks for posting this. will get it once available (on notify-me list)
    saludos

    best xxom

  2. Thank you, again, Krista…for all you have done to appeal to the consciousness of the people…and to the conscience of the policy makers and lawmakers that have imposed this upon our fragile landscape…dividing peoples in doing so.

  3. This is a book with amazing photographs!

  4. Pingback: In the Borderlands: National Geographic Geostories by Krista Schyler

  5. Kate Hodges says:

    I am not sure how to reach Krista, but I want to let her know that I work in South Tucson with Mexican and Native high school students. (An alternative high
    school for kids who aren’t making it in the other schools they have tried….)they are working on a mural project at their school inspired by her book Continental Divide. They have questions for her and would like her to come see their mural…They are effected by the border issues often….they would like to get a hold of Krista and have written her questions…any suggestions as to how to reach her? Thanks,
    Kate (Art Teacher Pima Vocational High School Tucson)

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