
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


We often think of evolution as happening over centuries if not millenia. But a remarkable Florida species demonstrated adaptation can happen over just a few years. In her new book, The Kite and the Snail: An Endangered Bird, Its Unlikely Prey, and a Story of Hope in a Changing World, scientist and educator Hilary Flower documents how in just a decade, the bill of the endangered Everglades snail kite adapted to a new prey — the invasive island apple snail — in order to survive. We talk with her about how a bird and a bug became a barometer of environmental possibility.
Guest: Hilary Flower, Eckerd College professor of environmental studies and author of The Kite and the Snail: An Endangered Bird, Its Unlikely Prey, and a Story of Hope in a Changing World
Community Land TrustA local nonprofit with a unique approach to making homes affordable celebrates its first new homeowner. The Jacksonville Community Land Trust was created in 2022 to marry aspiring homeowners with available land. The trust keeps ownership of the land and dedicates it to the owner of a newly built home through a 99-year renewable ground lease, reducing overall costs and helping to bring home ownership within reach. We talk to the land trust’s leader and partners about the process, participants and path to eligibility.
Guests:
In 2023, Duval County ranked sixth in new HIV cases in Florida, and the Florida Department of Health estimates more than 10,000 people in the county are living with the disease. This week, a local nonprofit is hosting the annual First Coast AIDS Walk to honor the lives lost to HIV/AIDS while also advocating to remove barriers to care for people living with the virus. The walk comes as legislative funding for the state's AIDS Drug Assistance Program remains up in the air, a concern for thousands of Floridians who rely on HIV/AIDS medication assistance. We ask the event’s organizer how the funding cuts could affect the local community and how events like this help reduce new infections. The walk will be at 9:15 a.m. Saturday at A. Philip Randolph Heritage Park. Registration is required.
Guest: Chris Day, board president, Friends of The Quilt
By WJCT News4.5
3434 ratings
We often think of evolution as happening over centuries if not millenia. But a remarkable Florida species demonstrated adaptation can happen over just a few years. In her new book, The Kite and the Snail: An Endangered Bird, Its Unlikely Prey, and a Story of Hope in a Changing World, scientist and educator Hilary Flower documents how in just a decade, the bill of the endangered Everglades snail kite adapted to a new prey — the invasive island apple snail — in order to survive. We talk with her about how a bird and a bug became a barometer of environmental possibility.
Guest: Hilary Flower, Eckerd College professor of environmental studies and author of The Kite and the Snail: An Endangered Bird, Its Unlikely Prey, and a Story of Hope in a Changing World
Community Land TrustA local nonprofit with a unique approach to making homes affordable celebrates its first new homeowner. The Jacksonville Community Land Trust was created in 2022 to marry aspiring homeowners with available land. The trust keeps ownership of the land and dedicates it to the owner of a newly built home through a 99-year renewable ground lease, reducing overall costs and helping to bring home ownership within reach. We talk to the land trust’s leader and partners about the process, participants and path to eligibility.
Guests:
In 2023, Duval County ranked sixth in new HIV cases in Florida, and the Florida Department of Health estimates more than 10,000 people in the county are living with the disease. This week, a local nonprofit is hosting the annual First Coast AIDS Walk to honor the lives lost to HIV/AIDS while also advocating to remove barriers to care for people living with the virus. The walk comes as legislative funding for the state's AIDS Drug Assistance Program remains up in the air, a concern for thousands of Floridians who rely on HIV/AIDS medication assistance. We ask the event’s organizer how the funding cuts could affect the local community and how events like this help reduce new infections. The walk will be at 9:15 a.m. Saturday at A. Philip Randolph Heritage Park. Registration is required.
Guest: Chris Day, board president, Friends of The Quilt

91,274 Listeners

6,997 Listeners

37,360 Listeners

9,231 Listeners

6,443 Listeners

4,690 Listeners

88,010 Listeners

113,520 Listeners

12,864 Listeners

12,714 Listeners

16,587 Listeners

18,310 Listeners

13,700 Listeners

4,163 Listeners