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It's hard to imagine a time without roads that connect us, facilitate commerce, allow us to reach hospital schools, family, and friends. And in plain sight, they grow in width, link density and traffic volume slowly and continually.
Amidst to the sprawling network that shapes our lives. There's a realm often overlooked, but equally profound. A domain where the intersection between humanity and nature takes an unforeseen twist.
Our guest today has Ben Goldfarb, author of the new book "Crossings: How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of Our Planet". You might remember Ben from a past episode where he discussed his book on beavers appropriately titled eager. And in typical Ben form, he reveals a hidden world in plain sight, full of surprises. From rapid adaptation by some animals to the intractable ways that 70 mile per hour traffic hack many animal's ability to cope. Ben's book will be released on September 12th. You can find more details at bengoldfarb.com.
FULL SHOW NOTES
LINKS
Ben Online: bengoldfarb.com, Instagram, Twitter
Crossings by Ben Goldfarb - Ben's new book
Nature’s Archive #30: Dr. Jaret Daniels – Butterflies, Creating Habitat in Overlooked Landscapes, and Leveraging Creative Outreach
Nature’s Archive #35: Ben Goldfarb – Eager Beavers, The Quintessential Keystone Species
Nature’s Archive #38: Beth Pratt – The Age of Wildlife Crossings
Sandra Jacobson - A behavior-based framework for assessing barrier effects to wildlife from vehicle traffic volume
Ware et al. - A phantom road experiment reveals traffic noise is an invisible source of habitat degradation
Marcel Hauser - Dutch road ecologist
Support Us On Patreon!
Buy our Merch!
Music: Spellbound by Brian Holtz Music
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Artist site: https://brianholtzmusic.com
Discover the Jumpstart Nature Podcast - entertaining and immersive, it's the nature fix we all need.
Check past Nature's Archive episodes for amazing guests like Doug Tallamy, Elaine Ingham, and Rae Wynn-Grant, covering topics from bird migration to fungi to frogs and bats!
4.9
5858 ratings
Subscribe to the Jumpstart Nature Podcast!
It's hard to imagine a time without roads that connect us, facilitate commerce, allow us to reach hospital schools, family, and friends. And in plain sight, they grow in width, link density and traffic volume slowly and continually.
Amidst to the sprawling network that shapes our lives. There's a realm often overlooked, but equally profound. A domain where the intersection between humanity and nature takes an unforeseen twist.
Our guest today has Ben Goldfarb, author of the new book "Crossings: How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of Our Planet". You might remember Ben from a past episode where he discussed his book on beavers appropriately titled eager. And in typical Ben form, he reveals a hidden world in plain sight, full of surprises. From rapid adaptation by some animals to the intractable ways that 70 mile per hour traffic hack many animal's ability to cope. Ben's book will be released on September 12th. You can find more details at bengoldfarb.com.
FULL SHOW NOTES
LINKS
Ben Online: bengoldfarb.com, Instagram, Twitter
Crossings by Ben Goldfarb - Ben's new book
Nature’s Archive #30: Dr. Jaret Daniels – Butterflies, Creating Habitat in Overlooked Landscapes, and Leveraging Creative Outreach
Nature’s Archive #35: Ben Goldfarb – Eager Beavers, The Quintessential Keystone Species
Nature’s Archive #38: Beth Pratt – The Age of Wildlife Crossings
Sandra Jacobson - A behavior-based framework for assessing barrier effects to wildlife from vehicle traffic volume
Ware et al. - A phantom road experiment reveals traffic noise is an invisible source of habitat degradation
Marcel Hauser - Dutch road ecologist
Support Us On Patreon!
Buy our Merch!
Music: Spellbound by Brian Holtz Music
License (CC BY 4.0): https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Artist site: https://brianholtzmusic.com
Discover the Jumpstart Nature Podcast - entertaining and immersive, it's the nature fix we all need.
Check past Nature's Archive episodes for amazing guests like Doug Tallamy, Elaine Ingham, and Rae Wynn-Grant, covering topics from bird migration to fungi to frogs and bats!
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