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ZSL #028 What's next for rewilding?

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

Release Date: 12/11/2020

ZSL #049 The forest behind your floorboards show art ZSL #049 The forest behind your floorboards

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

Do you know where the wood in your floorboards comes from? Or your desk, or dining chairs? In this episode, we dig deep into the grain of a global issue that is often hidden in plain sight in our offices, our houses and our cities – tracing timber back to its source. Harriet talks to Annabelle Dodson, ZSL’s Sustainable Business Project Manager, and Victor Deklerck, Director of Science at World Forest ID, about how scientists use isotopes to pinpoint where the trees behind our wood products were grown, the role of digital tracking systems in supply chains, and real-world cases where...

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ZSL #048 The rubber story and the road to sustainability show art ZSL #048 The rubber story and the road to sustainability

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

What do car tyres, yoga mats and trainers have in common? They all contain natural rubber, tapped from trees by millions of small farmers, mostly in Asia. While natural rubber production is renewable, its impact on the environment through deforestation, habitat loss and soil degradation, can be great when not managed sustainably. In this episode, we hear from a Thai rubber farmer, about the challenges faced on the ground, as well as one of the world’s biggest tyre makers, Michelin, about rubber’s colonial history, its tangled supply chains, and how they’re working with farmers on...

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ZSL #047 Shark Tales of North Wales show art ZSL #047 Shark Tales of North Wales

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

The coastal waters of Wales are home to a whopping 27 species of sharks, skates and rays, known collectively as elasmobranchs, and they are a fundamental part of Wales’ natural heritage. But even so, research on their biology and conservation status is lacking. In this episode, Wild Science hits the road to join scientists from Project SIARC and the Ocean Predator Lab in North Wales as they work with local fishing communities to monitor tope sharks, and contribute to better understanding and conservation of shark species in the region. Overview 00:11    Harriet McAra, Host of Wild...

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ZSL #046 Feeding the Zoo: Nutrition for animals under managed care show art ZSL #046 Feeding the Zoo: Nutrition for animals under managed care

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

Making sure that the animals held in ZSL’s two conservation zoos, London and Whipsnade, are fed a diet that can help them thrive is crucial, both for keeping them healthy under managed care, and ensuring they are in the best possible shape for a return to the wild. Amanda Ferguson is ZSL’s Diet Management Officer and is responsible for creating tailored diets for all the animals across both ZSL Zoos, from snails to elephants! We learn how to feed an animal for which there are no guidelines, why enriched feeding methods are so important, and why you’ll rarely see a monkey at London Zoo...

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ZSL #045 BONUS Nature's Negotiators: Saving the planet one meeting at a time show art ZSL #045 BONUS Nature's Negotiators: Saving the planet one meeting at a time

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

After our Nature’s Negotiators miniseries, where we learned all about the complexities, challenges and importance of United Nations climate and biodiversity meetings, we wanted to give the gift of a bonus episode to round things off! We catch up with Bethan to hear how things went after she attended COP29, United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Azerbaijan. Overview 00:11     , Host of Wild Science, Episode introduction  00:54     , ZSL’s Senior Policy Specialist, on how the finance negotiations at COP29 played out 06:37     Bethan on...

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ZSL #044 Nature's Negotiators: The UN's Wildest Diplomatic Mission - Part 2 show art ZSL #044 Nature's Negotiators: The UN's Wildest Diplomatic Mission - Part 2

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

2024 has been a big year for international climate policy, with two UN Conference of Parties, or COPs, taking place in quick succession; COP16 in Colombia followed just a few weeks later by COP29 in Azerbaijan. In this episode of Wild Science, we follow on from part one of our Nature’s Negotiators miniseries, and are once again joined by Bethan Laughlin, ZSL Senior Policy Specialist. We discuss the challenges and successes of the two biodiversity and climate COPs, tackle some new UN lingo, and hear about key hopes for the future of climate policy. Overview 00:12     , Host of...

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ZSL #043 Back to the Wild: Assessing disease risks for species reintroduction show art ZSL #043 Back to the Wild: Assessing disease risks for species reintroduction

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

What does it take to reintroduce an animal to the wild safely? How do we make sure that disease risk to existing populations, and to the animals being reintroduced, is mitigated? Hear from the Disease Risk Analysis and Health Surveillance Team (DRAHS) at ZSL who are working to give animals the best start possible as they return to the wild, and whose work has contributed to the recovery of over 30 species across the world. Overview 00:11    , Introduction to episode 01:01    , DRAHS lead, ZSL 05:44    Clare McNamee, Wildlife Veterinarian and Research...

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ZSL #042 Nature's Negotiators: The UN's Wildest Diplomatic Mission - Part 1 show art ZSL #042 Nature's Negotiators: The UN's Wildest Diplomatic Mission - Part 1

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

You may have heard of a COP, and you’ve almost definitely heard of the United Nations (UN), but how much do you know about the negotiations that go into getting nature, climate and biodiversity embedded into international policy? Ahead of the United Nations Biodiversity Conference (CBD COP16) in Colombia this autumn, we’re hearing from policy experts in this two-part miniseries on how we can save the planet one meeting at a time…or at least try to. Overview 00:11     Introduction to Nature’s Negotiators mini-series 00:24     , ZSL’s Senior Policy Specialist,...

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ZSL #041 Reimagining Coral Reefs show art ZSL #041 Reimagining Coral Reefs

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

Out of sight…but not out of mind? Coral reefs exist largely out of sight for the majority of the world’s population, so the vast array of ecosystem services they provide for local communities are often forgotten, leading conservation efforts to feel like an uphill battle. In this episode, we talk to the people trying to tackle this problem; from using the sounds that healthy and degraded coral reefs make to monitor their restoration, to bringing people closer to coral reefs using virtual reality.   Overview 00:13    Introduction to the topic from 01:26    ,...

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ZSL #040 Mammal conservation in Korea: Human-carnivore coexistence on the Korean Peninsula show art ZSL #040 Mammal conservation in Korea: Human-carnivore coexistence on the Korean Peninsula

ZSL Wild Science Podcast

Co-existence between communities living on the Korean Peninsula and carnivores such as leopards, tigers and black bears, has historically presented many challenges leading to population declines in these species. However, thanks to international treaties such as the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, as well as economic growth and conservation translocations, the tide is now turning on these declines in South Korea. In this episode, host Harriet McAra is joined by Joshua Elves-Powell to discuss how wildlife trade has impacted carnivores in East Asia, and the conservation...

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More Episodes

Rewilding has emerged as a captivating, but controversial, concept in conservation. Depending on how rewilding is defined, it aims to increase “wildness” of nature, regenerate ecosystem functioning, develop self-sustaining ecosystems, or a combination of these. Join Monni as she finds out from the experts how real “wildness” can be achieved, and why now is an important time for the UK to be thinking about rewilding. What is even possible in places like the UK where we have quite limited space? Should people be part of rewilding? And why can the Tamworth Pig be considered the hippopotamus of the UK?