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    Moir’s Environmental Dialogues

    With the knowledge of Carson and the courage of Achilles, individuals are steadfastly going the distance to defend wildlife and ecosystems from assaults of environmental degradations and destructions. Join environmental studies scientist Dr. Rob Moir for lively dialogue and revealing narrative inquiry into how individuals are overcoming the obstacles turning forlorn hope into effective actions for oceans, rivers, watersheds, wildlife and ecosystems. Discover how listening to individuals, thinking locally, and acting in concert with other, you can act to save ecosystems. Got environmental stewardship? Become an Eco-steward. Act to bring about a greener and blue Planet Earth.
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    Episodes (198)

    Capt Nan Beaver in the Wilds of Indian River Lagoon, Florida

    Capt Nan Beaver in the Wilds of Indian River Lagoon, Florida
    Today Rob Moir is back, hosting Captain Nancy Beaver of Sunshine Wildlife Tours and his intern Noa Randall, to talk about what’s happening in Indian River Lagoon and learn more about the special wildlife that inhabits this area. Captain Beaver tells us about how Bird Island was recently designated as a Critical Wildlife Habitat, which is super important in helping to inform the public about the importance of this region. In addition, the work ORI was helping with down along the lagoon has continued and finally all the counties lining this body of water have passed fertilizer ordinances! Great progress! Nancy explains more about some of the unique animals that call this lagoon, and Bird Island, home including the Roseate Spoonbill, the Magnificent Frigatebird, and the Bottlenose Dolphins. Though lots of good work has been done already, there is always more we can do to help protect and preserve our environment. Keep up your support!

    A Shark Sanctuary in the Straits of Florida

    A Shark Sanctuary in the Straits of Florida
    Rob Moir’s guests are Noa Randall and Ryan Czekanski-Moir of the Ocean River Institute. They talk about proposing sanctuary for sharks in the Straits of Florida. Ryan covers the geology of the area and explains how to the east is the Oculina Reef with coral thickets and in deeper water the Blake Plateau, where a host of organisms live. Noa talks about the Lemon and Sandbar Sharks, as well as less abundant sharks. Recently, 40-50 sharks were seen off Jupiter and all were caught by long-liners. We are working with local communities to build a nomination for a National Marine Sanctuary and invite listeners to join with us.

    Garibaldi Swims in Kelp Forest with Noa Randall

    Garibaldi Swims in Kelp Forest with Noa Randall
    Ocean River Institute’s spring intern, Noa Randall, talks with Rob about kelp forests and sailing on a tall ship in Pacific Ocean. Noa discusses her experience snorkeling along the coast of Catalina Island. She spotted a sea lion gliding between kelp fronds, wanting to play but just as easily ready to attack. She found on the rocky wall tube snails with their plumed crowns swaying in the water attempting to catch zooplankton. As she swam back towards shore, Noa floated over congregating Leopard Sharks and some Shovelnose Guitarfish. We also talk about the giant black sea bass, their history and presence in that ecosystem as a popular sport fish. The program finishes up by telling listeners what campaigns ORI is currently working on and what they can do to help. Tune in!

    Special Encore Presentation of Ocean Wanderers: MA Sturgeon and Lampreys

    Special Encore Presentation of Ocean Wanderers: MA Sturgeon and Lampreys
    Sturgeons and lampreys are truly ocean river dwellers. My understanding and awe of anadromous fish was forever altered by lamprey nest building behavior and what the behavior of two sturgeon told Dr Boyd Kynard last month. Many years ago, he discovered in his neighborhood the only Massachusetts tributary river of the Connecticut River watershed that is not dammed, the Fort River. We talk about an amazing fish, the lamprey, which stops feeding in Long Island Sound to travel to the Pelham Hills transporting carbon and ocean chemicals including boron to endow ecosystems far from the sea. Discover the many ways lamprey leave an environment better off than found. Don’t miss Dr. Kynard’s remarkable research findings of Atlantic and shortnose sturgeon populations in the CT and Merrimack Rivers. Both sturgeon and lamprey are resilient, long-lived fish, ocean wanderers with life histories and survival strategies very different from the well-studied salmon.

    Special Encore Presentation: Right Whales, Right Plankton, Right Ecosystem

    Special Encore Presentation: Right Whales, Right Plankton, Right Ecosystem
    Live from Cape Cod, Rob will speak with the Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies including Richard Delaney, Dr. Stormy Mayo and Tanya about what is being done and what you can do to save whales and to better the ocean environment that whales depend on. Ocean Champions will update on a bipartisan bill on Capital Hill for research and mediation of harmful algal blooms that includes red tide.

    Special Encore Presentation: Sizzle, Global Warming Comedy and Shifting Baselines with Randy Olson

    Special Encore Presentation: Sizzle, Global Warming Comedy and Shifting Baselines with Randy Olson
    Randy Olson, marine biologist and filmmaker talks about “shifting baselines” for ecosystems and his newest film Sizzle to premier in NYC on Oct 23. Shifting baselines are the chronic, slow changes to an ecosystem or place that one is not apt to notice until. It is more difficult to appreciate and understand what has been lost in a degraded system if a baseline of what is there had not been established in the past. Sizzle, the documentary, addresses climate change without the graphs, but with disagreeable scientists and with sophisticated humor. Randy Olson explains the distinctions and advantages to “mockumentaries” versus documentaries, where media respects the better understandings that listeners have in order to get the parody. www.sizzlethemovie.com Dave Wilmot tells of marking-up a bill in DC for tackling harmful algal blooms and ocean hypoxia. www.oceanchampions.org Chukchi Sea hairy blob days are numbered.

    Special Encore Presentation: Saving Bristol Bay Salmon, Alaska’s Red Gold

    Special Encore Presentation: Saving Bristol Bay Salmon, Alaska’s Red Gold
    Bristol Bay Alaska fishermen Katherine Carscallen and Brett Veerhusen talk with Rob about the world’s finest salmon fishery for indigenous people, for commercial fishermen and for recreational anglers. This is breathtakingly beautiful, awesomely wild country and a way of life that most of us assume no longer exists. Katherine and Brett want us all to care passionately for Bristol Bay and for the salmon known as “Alaska’s red gold.” Only then can we comprehend the problem with building the ginormous Pebble Mine at the head of all of Bristol Bay rivers. Will you care if Katherine’s and Brett’s livelihood is forever lost? Care if the land of walrus, seal, fish and eagle destroyed by a mining waste accident?

    Special Encore Presentation: Implementing the National Ocean Policy

    Special Encore Presentation: Implementing the National Ocean Policy
    Alison Chase and Sarah Chasis (pictured) of the Natural Resources Defense Council talk with Rob about what Sarah calls “a recipe for smart ocean management that could set our oceans on track to long term health.” With so many American jobs and communities dependent on oceans, this is a most opportune time for ocean planning. Let's dive in. Recently President Obama issued the final plan for managing our oceans, a call for collaborative communications and management across 27 federal agencies and departments in concert with state agencies, municipal, local groups and tribal nations. The National Ocean Policy directs federal agencies to use their authority under existing law to protect, maintain, and restore the health of marine ecosystems.

    Special Encore Presentation: Quelling the Storm at Sea and the Ocean View from Lazy Point

    Special Encore Presentation: Quelling the Storm at Sea and the Ocean View from Lazy Point
    Carl Safina talks about, and reads from, his book The View from Lazy Point. A year of observations is presented in gripping details from the tip of the swallowtail that is Eastern Long Island. Carl takes us beyond the mysteries of fishing into deep connections with place and fish. Discover the compatible yet distinctive natural history of the Common Tern and its close relative the Roseate Tern. Three things that we need to understand are: that life is a fully networked community; we ought to act with reverence and caution; and “that the story we write with our lives affects those living near and far, and not just now but in the distant future.” To sail these complex and opaque waters with treacherous shores looming large to leeward, we must be more nibble in our steering and find our way with a “compass of compassion.” Carl’s television series on PBS is “Saving the Ocean.” His next book is Sea of Flames. For more info visit http://carlsafina.org

    Special Encore Presentation: Six Fish and a Whale for Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary

    Special Encore Presentation: Six Fish and a Whale for Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary
    Rob’s guest is Radio Host, Actress and Singer, Christine Larkin. Christine reports on ocean life and storm changes to Long Island. In a reversal of roles, Christine interviews Rob about 7 animals of Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. Cod and stockfish brought people long ago to Stellwagen. Declining cod stocks in 1639 alarmed the Pilgrims to pass a law protecting cod. It has been downhill for cod since 1620, until 2008 when a natural phenomenon on Stellwagen misled scientists to overestimate cod numbers. Rob describes what makes tuna a Boston Bluefin commanding high market prices, bubble netting by humpback whales, redfish of muddy bottom, haddock of gravel bottoms, goosefish or monkfish of sandy bottoms and the wolffish of boulder reefs. Christine and Rob suggest what one can do to save marine life and enjoy a more vibrant Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary. For more information visit Ocean River

    Special Encore Presentation: Striped Bass and Massachusetts Fishermen

    Special Encore Presentation: Striped Bass and Massachusetts Fishermen
    Darren Saletta has caught Striped Bass by hook & line for 20 years. The Striped Bass fishery is a well managed, clean, environmentally sound operation with plenty of fish. Industrial fishing operations are destroying the striper’s food base. Herring, Mackerel, & Menhaden are caught in massive nets that can kill tons of by-catch, including Striped Bass. Water quality is an issue for Striped Bass in the Chesapeake. Burgeoning Gray Seal populations are fouling inshore waters with excessive waste and decimating inshore forage, forcing Striped Bass to feed much further offshore to the dismay of surf fishermen. Seals are also cleaning out fishing weirs, another environmentally favorable method of commercial fishing. Striped Bass fishermen are under attack by a special interest group attempting to close the fishery, stripping us of the ability to buy Striped Bass at fish markets or restaurants. Discover what you can do to protect Striped Bass and this culturally significant fishery.

    Special Encore Presentation: Saving the Nation’s Oceans and the Big Clathrate Gun Firing Methane Gas.

    Special Encore Presentation: Saving the Nation’s Oceans and the Big Clathrate Gun Firing Methane Gas.
    Richard Charter a senior fellow at the Ocean Foundation talks with Rob. A House Committee passed yesterday a measure to boost oil production off of California and leases for drilling off of the U.S. Southeast. Known for protecting CA shores, Richard also raises concerns for living in Virginia, New England, and the NW. He calls for expanding National Marine Sanctuaries. Methane gas hydrate is gas locked in an ice-like lattice of water molecules. There’s more of it to be had than natural gas. Extraction is very risky as there is evidence that a great release of gas hydrates, called the clathrate gun hypothesis, caused an ice age. There is stronger evidence that this methane “gun” caused the Permian extinction event 251 million years ago, when 96% of all marine species became extinct. Despite our destructive tendencies, Richard explains how he still finds hope for humanity.

    Stop Dental Mercury, It's a Common Cause of Chronic Disease

    Stop Dental Mercury, It's a Common Cause of Chronic Disease
    Karen Palmer of the Pennsylvania Coalition for Mercury-Free Dentistry and Dental Amalgam Mercury Solutions talks with Rob about her personal experience with severe mercury poisoning. Karen, who worked as a dental assistant, is suffering from the effects of mercury exposure in the dentist's office as well as her own exposure through having nine amalgam fillings of her own. Karen is very active in working to educate the public on toxic dentistry and how it can be avoided. Laura Henze Russell talks about her experience, and how you can join Hidden River Health Challenge: A Social Innovation Enterprise and become part of a network of people and organizations starting to coordination communication, strategy and actions at the local, state and federal levels. Become part of a network of people and organizations starting to coordination communication, strategy and actions at the local, state and federal levels at http://www.oceanriver.org/hiddenriver.php

    Bass Bungalows, Snook Shacks and Goliath Grouper Hotels

    Bass Bungalows, Snook Shacks and Goliath Grouper Hotels
    Lee Shepard of IntraCoastal Eco Systems talks with Rob about creating artificial reef communities to save Indian River Lagoon. Lee builds unique and custom-designed fish shelters to protect smaller fish from apex predators (Snapper, Trout, Redfish, Snook, Tarpon, and Grouper), as well as habitats for the predators. Lee’s artificial habitats include oyster shells so those oyster sprats are quick to catch on and swell the structure. Recent systems feature hide-away spots for cleaner fish and LED lights in 200 colors. Alarmed by the death of many dolphins and manatees, and in particular the death of 11 humans to harmful algal blooms, Lee took action as a River Warrior on a bus to Washington. In DC River Kidz gave oyster shells to legislators demanding clean water once more. Lee is succeeding, structure by structure, to reverse the damages and injustices that have been done to our precious estuaries, lagoons, and Intracoastal waterways in the last 40 to 50 years.

    Mercury Poisoning with Dental Amalgam, the Hidden River Health Challenge

    Mercury Poisoning with Dental Amalgam, the Hidden River Health Challenge
    Laura Henze Russell, Director of ORI’s Hidden River Health Challenge, spoke with Rob about good health, integrated care and making chronic diseases history. Two MA Bills have been filed to protect the public from undisclosed health risks of mercury dental amalgam. Laura has met with the MA Dept. of Public Health and Executive Office of Health & Human Services to discuss broader reforms to integrate dental plans into health care and make it subject to medical necessity, patient rights and data-driven outcomes. Laura has a Warrant before Sharon Town Meeting asking President Obama for a Surgeon General Report on Dental Amalgam and Mercury Health Risks. Laura is reaching out to additional organizations to work For Good Health, attending the MA Health Policy Commission, and advocating for the Women’s Health Equity Plan to include gender, genes and toxins. The FDA was just sued for failing to respond a petition to reconsider its flawed 2009 Class II ruling after 54 months.

    Saving the Planet with the Man from Winchester MA

    Saving the Planet with the Man from Winchester MA
    My guest today will by MA state Rep Jason Lewis who is running for state Senate and is saving the world for global warming and too much pollution by authoring MA's solid waste reduction and recycling bill. As well as co-sponsoring a ban plastic bags bill and a carbon tax bill, plus safer alternatives to harmful chemicals. Tune in for talk with a real blue green hero.
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