Some questions of Patrick Mucci to be answered...
If a field can be converted to wetlands, what's the net loss? Or, are you stating that farms and pastures should never have been created ? Or, that those fields should be returned to their natural state ?
Ecologically the best thing is in most cases to just leave it alone. A Golf course developer cannot improve on nature itself, he will destroy it to some degree.
Now, if the options are: either build a Golf course or build a residential area or build a nuclear dump, then the ecological balance in most cases favors the Golf course. Therefore environmentally valuable areas should be off-limits in general, not just for Golf course construction.
Remediation is unrealistic. To be effective it would mean that an area with supermarkets, housing or corn fields would have to be renatured (given back to nature). It does not make ecological sense if you take a wetlands area and make it a field and then take a field and make it a wetland area. You have taken two areas from nature and gave nothing back.
Should man be obligated to cede land to mosquitos ?
Have NGLA, Lido, Yale, Shinnecock, Southampton or Maidstone harmed the environment ?
Yes on all counts, except I'm not quite sure what you mean with the first question. As for the classic courses, they are here and we all love them. They were built in a time of little ecological awareness, just as there were times of little social awareness, where pyramids were being built by slaves. We are not going to tear down any of it, but we should be more responsible today with new projects.
Shouldn't the goal be to build a golf course ?
I don't think so. Golf courses are one of the very few large scale building projects, which can involve nature and turn a profit. Therefore, building a Golf course is an opportunity to do something for nature, which is sustainable, because it pays for itself. Parks and other ecological efforts are costly and sometimes not sustainable in the long run. Then, when the money runs out, somebody jumps up and builds housing - not good.
If something has to be built, then from an ecological point of view it is often best to build a Golf course. But that is still far inferior to just leave it alone. And there are some areas, which simply have to be protected from any human intervention, because we are running out of them. This being the case with Links land, for example. And building Golf courses in the desert is just so horrible that it should be punishable with jail. Don't get me started ;-)
Ulrich