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Chesapeake Uncharted

Release Date: 11/11/2022

The Importance of Being an Eel show art The Importance of Being an Eel

Chesapeake Uncharted

All about eels. Along with great blue herons and humans, eels are probably the most widely distributed of all Chesapeake Bay species. The returning eels will spread throughout the Chesapeake and its 40 some rivers and thousands of streams, eating and being eaten. It's hard to think of a more vital part of the region's aquatic ecosystem. 

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Chasing Migrations show art Chasing Migrations

Chesapeake Uncharted

Take a sound journey with the makers of the Chesapeake Bay Journal's latest documentary film, "Chesapeake Rhythms." Dave Harp, Tom Horton and Sandy Cannon Brown share the behind the scenes story of how they captured footage of tundra swans, monarch butterflies, eels and shorebirds. 

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Season 4 Trailer: Chasing Migrations show art Season 4 Trailer: Chasing Migrations

Chesapeake Uncharted

Migrations shape life in the Chesapeake Bay and its watershed. Follow along with Chesapeake Bay Journal filmmakers David Harp, Tom Horton and Sandy Cannon Brown as they track the journeys of monarch butterflies, eels, tundra swans and shorebirds in their latest documentary, . Hear behind-the-scenes interviews with the filmmakers as well as original reporting by Jeremy Cox and Lauren Hines-Acosta. The new podcast season debuts May 21.

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Connor Tupponce: How a Treaty from 1677 Can Help Save the Bay show art Connor Tupponce: How a Treaty from 1677 Can Help Save the Bay

Chesapeake Uncharted

Connor Tupponce, a member of the Upper Mattaponi and Chickahominy tribes, discusses his work promoting tribal consultation in environmental and land-use matters in Virginia. Indigenous voices are crucial in managing public lands, he says. That's especially true at Werowocomoco, the recently rediscovered site along the York River that was once the seat of the Powhatan Confederacy.

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Ron Lopez: Hunting Down Potentially Toxic Algae in a Major Virginia River show art Ron Lopez: Hunting Down Potentially Toxic Algae in a Major Virginia River

Chesapeake Uncharted

Ron Lopez is a researcher in wetlands ecology at Virginia Commonwealth University who is part of a team breaking ground on our understanding of potentially toxic algae blooms in the Shenandoah River. His efforts toward developing remote-sensing methods to map those slilmy blooms are the basis of his ongoing doctoral thesis. So, yes, we will be talking about drones. Lopez also discusses his atypical path into academia. 

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Symone Barkley: Why Our Children Need Environmental Education show art Symone Barkley: Why Our Children Need Environmental Education

Chesapeake Uncharted

Symone Barkley, a Baltimore native, is a recipient of the North American Association for Environmental Education’s "30 Under 30 Award," which recognizes young leaders in the field worldwide. And she’s a fellow traveler in the podcast world, hosting a podcast series for her employer, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That would be “ Here, she discusses the state of environmental education in America and what can be done to get kids more interested in nature studies. Barkley also talks about the kits she has developed providing kids with hands-on, STEM-based activities....

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Grace Ziegmont: She Caught the EPA by the Ear, and Officials Listened show art Grace Ziegmont: She Caught the EPA by the Ear, and Officials Listened

Chesapeake Uncharted

The Pennsylvania 4-H chapter has named Grace Ziegmont as one of its state project ambassadors. These are members who provide guidance to 4-H staff statewide on programming and projects. The 16-year-old York County resident also serves as the president of the Governor’s Youth Council for Hunting, Fishing and Conservation. And we haven’t even gotten to her role in making historic change happen within a federal agency. 

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Jay Fleming: Capturing the Chesapeake Bay's Disappearing History show art Jay Fleming: Capturing the Chesapeake Bay's Disappearing History

Chesapeake Uncharted

Jay Fleming has devoted his life to documenting a dying way of life on the Chesapeake Bay. He has compiled his photographs of watermen into two popular books. His photographs, more than anyone else's, tell the tale of of the estuary's seafood industry. 

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Maya Alexander: Building Stronger Connections Between the Black Community and Nature show art Maya Alexander: Building Stronger Connections Between the Black Community and Nature

Chesapeake Uncharted

Helping others fall in love with nature is one of Maya Alexander's main passions. She is African American and has experienced first hand the challenges of engaging with the outdoors, a pasttime that has traditionally been associated with the white middle class. Yet, Alexander, a community engagement manager for Virginia's Alliance for the Shenandoah Valley, finds a way to keep moving forward in the face of adversity. We talked about her strategies for encouraging more diversity in outdoor pursuits. And she offered glimpses into how environmental organizations can take up causes for...

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Noah Bressman: Fighting Invasive Fish Species with Our Forks show art Noah Bressman: Fighting Invasive Fish Species with Our Forks

Chesapeake Uncharted

Noah Bressman, a Salisbury University researcher, has quickly made a name for himself as a marine biology researcher and a science communicator. He’s active on social media. He organizes fishing tournaments that incorporate environmental education. He envisions a world with fewer invasive fish in the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries -- a world made possible by people making subtle shifts to their diets. 

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