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    30by30

    Explore "30by30" with insightful episodes like "National Parks Traveler Podcast | 2023 Park System Year in Review Part 1", "E22 - Between a rock and a dry place", "National Parks Traveler Podcast | National Parks Expansion For Biodiversity", "National Parks Traveler Podcast | Gauging Western Views" and "National Parks Traveler |Rewilding the West" from podcasts like ""National Parks Traveler Podcast", "Back from the Brink - The Podcast", "National Parks Traveler Podcast", "National Parks Traveler Podcast" and "National Parks Traveler Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (7)

    National Parks Traveler Podcast | 2023 Park System Year in Review Part 1

    National Parks Traveler Podcast | 2023 Park System Year in Review Part 1

    The past year has been a trying one for the National Park Service, and for many of the units in the National Park System. For the agency, employee morale continued to be a major issue as housing, pay, and leadership remained sore spots for many who worked for the Service.

    On the ground, climate change continued to impact parks, from sea level rise and more potent storms, to wildfires, and hotter and dryer conditions that adversely affected vegetation, wildlife, and facilities.

    With time running out on 2023, and 2024 on the horizon, we’re going to be taking a look this week and next at many of the top stories that played out, or are playing out, across the National Park System and the National Park Service. Joining us for the conversation are Mike Murray, Chair of the Coalition to Protect America’s National Parks, and Kristen Brengel, the Vice President of Government Affairs for the National Parks Conservation Association.

    E22 - Between a rock and a dry place

    E22 - Between a rock and a dry place

    Episode 22 heads into the remote dry, vine-thickets of South East Queensland to meet a remarkable reptile. With Australia's commitment to the 30 by 30 pledge (a worldwide initiative for governments to designate 30% of Earth's land and ocean area as protected areas by 2030), we look at what protected areas do for threatened species. The Nangur Spiny Skink (Nangura spinosa) is one such species. With its entire global population occurring in just a handful of national parks, this species is just hanging on at the mercy of climate change, disease, weeds, feral animals and more. With so few places left, and so many threats, these parks are quite literally saving this little lizard from extinction. We meet with Dan Ferguson from the Queensland Government Department of Environment and Science to learn what his team are doing to keep this friendly skink, and its protected areas, safe.

     

    To find out more about the amazing Nangur Spiny Skink and how you can help save it from extinction, search for Natura Pacific Back from the Brink - Season 5 Episode 2 available on YouTube, LinkedIn, IGTV and the Natura Pacific Facebook Page, or watch here: https://youtu.be/5vzwapxrYYc 

     

    Visit our new Action Hub webpage: www.natura-pacific.com/actionhub 

    National Parks Traveler Podcast | National Parks Expansion For Biodiversity

    National Parks Traveler Podcast | National Parks Expansion For Biodiversity

    Why expand the National Park System? That can be a controversial question. There are many folks who would love to see additional units added, and there are just as many who say the National Park Service does not have the staff or funding to adequately maintain the existing park system.

    We’ve been exploring that question in recent weeks and months, and an argument can be made that since national parks carry the highest protection of natural resources in the country, we should expand the park system to better protect biodiversity and, if possible, help it grow.

    In this week’s show, Lynn Riddick helps me present you with a story that explores the question of expanding the National Park System for the sake of biodiversity. If you prefer reading the story, rather than having it narrated to you, the long-form post is on the Traveler.

    At the end of our story about expanding the park system, Lynn returns with a short audio postcard from Big Cypress National Preserve.

    National Parks Traveler Podcast | Gauging Western Views

    National Parks Traveler Podcast | Gauging Western Views

    For more than a decade, Colorado College has sponsored a poll to gauge conservation sentiments of residents in Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, Idaho, Wyoming, Montana and Nevada. Over the years, the questions have ranged from whether the members of the public view themselves as conservationists, whether land conservation and protection can be paired with a strong economy, and even whether federal lands should be turned over to the states. 

    The 2023 State of the Rockies poll just came out, and it points to public support for strong conservation policies that protect wildlife and wild lands, and what some might call surprisingly strong support from a largely conservative corner of the country, for a conservation goal of protecting 30 percent of the nation’s lands and waters by 2030. We’re going to get into the poll results with Brian Kurzel, the National Wildlife Federation’s regional executive director for the Rocky Mountain region.

    National Parks Traveler |Rewilding the West

    National Parks Traveler |Rewilding the West

    The Biden administration’s desire to preserve at least 30 percent of the country’s lands and waters for nature by 2030 has heightened the public’s interest in nature, and spurred countless conversations into not only how that goal can be achieved, but about the benefits that it will generate.

    Professor William Ripple from Oregon State University, Michael Phillips from the Turner Endangered Species Fund, and Elaine Leslie, who was the National Park Service’s chief for biological resources, discuss their proposal to expand the territories of wolves and beavers in the American West to “Rewild the West.”

    National Parks Traveler: Rick Ridgeway's Life Lived Wild

    National Parks Traveler: Rick Ridgeway's Life Lived Wild

    Today we’re talking adventures, friendships, and the environment with Rick Ridgeway, who has traveled the world seeking adventure and, along the way, debated and discussed environmental consciousness with his friends, colleagues and peers. Rick, a climber, kayaker, explorer, filmmaker, and thoughtful writer, has a new book out, Life Lived Wild, that chronicles many of the adventures he’s embarked upon the past five decades or so.