by Shanna Baker
In the Northern Territory of Australia, policymakers and biologists managed the impossible—making the benefits of living with a booming population of deadly crocodiles outweigh the risks. But when two apex predators must share coastal resources, there’s bound to be conflict.
The Poachers Who Could Save Mexico’s Vaquita
Neighborhood Digs
The Big Baltic Bomb Cleanup
Safety and Seaplanes
Here a Bee, There a Bee, Everywhere a Wild Bee
Encounters with the Maverick Archaeologist of the Americas
The Very Hungry Urchins
Rebroadcast: Leviathans in the Harbor
The Social Cost of Carbon Credits
Blood in the Water, Food on the Table, Protestors on the Shore
The Owls Who Came From Away
The Estuary Smothered by a Thousand Logs
A Dose of Antacids, a Quaint British Bay, and a Public Relations Fiasco
A Step Forward in Stingray Science
Rebroadcast: The Rat Spill
Buying Baja
Not Too Wet To Burn
How Viking-Age Hunters Took Down the Biggest Animal on Earth
Rebroadcast: Ticked Off on Martha’s Vineyard
The Waning Reign of the Wetland Architect We Barely Know (Hint, Not a Beaver)
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It is Free
Strange by Nature Podcast
Blurry Creatures
Bigfoot Society
Tooth & Claw: True Stories of Animal Attacks
Constant Wonder