The biggest animal in Philadelphia (and other port cities) isn’t a deer or a coyote, it’s a fish. We talk with biologist Shannon White about Atlantic sturgeon and her research into their depressingly reduced populations. We talk about how the caviar boom of the late 1800s devastated sturgeon populations, and about how their slow life history, channelization, boat traffic, anchor dragging, and exotic species (like blue and channel catfish) work against their recovery. We talk about how people might accidentally or intentionally introduce captive stock of sturgeon into the wild and why that is a terrible idea. Tony blames America’s dysfunctional health insurance system on shad (and how they fed George Washington’s troops at Valley Forge). We also talk about snorkeling in rivers (are smallmouth bass really cuddly?), how fish ladders work, and Billy’s dreams of spear fishing flathead catfish to examine their stomach contents, even though they are too toxic to eat.
Urban Nature Bikesploration!
All the Urban Raptors We Could Fit in One Episode
From Bison to Warblers, Connecting Youth to Wildlife
Save the Beetles and Salamanders!
Urban Caracals and Barcelona Boars
Arthropods through the Ages
Urban Wildlife Art
Happy World Sparrow Day!
S2 Episode 1: Leopards, Hyenas, and Synanthropic Dogs
Send Us Your Audio Postcards!
Bonus Episode: Pier 53 Skinks
Episode 9: Return of the Sturgeon
Episode 8: Does a Striper Know It’s in a City?
Episode 7: Chasing the Urban Exotic
Episode 6: Our River is Better than Your Dammed River
Episode 5: Squirrels vs. Hawks
Episode 4: Cats and Coyotes
Episode 2: Right under our noses?
Episode 3*: Timbers on a Boston Island
Episode 1: Bangkok Pythons and Gotham Whales
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