Related Articles

Food As Medicine - 17-January-2020
Food As Medicine - 17-January-2020

by Morgan Sanders

Read more
- Jan 17, 2020
Bees, Balm and Biodiversity
Bees, Balm and Biodiversity

by Kira Johnson

Three years ago, beekeeper Moira O’Hanlon was taking care of her mom, who had advanced dementia. Her mother’s skin was in really bad shape but her doctors kept prescribing chemical-laden lotions that didn’t…

Read more
- Sep 30, 2019
Wildlife in Civilization’s Image: A Review of Inanimate
Wildlife in Civilization’s Image: A Review of Inanimate

by Zoe Krasney

The book Inanimate: A Field Guide to Wild Animals in Civilization was born from a dead bear on the side of the road in Eastern Pennsylvania. After stopping to check on the animal, authors Dan and Ellen…

Read more
- Feb 22, 2019
Private Lands Protecting Species
Private Lands Protecting Species

by Kira Johnson

In January of 2018, I had the pleasure of interviewing Michael Phillips, a brilliant restoration ecologist, the Founder and Director of the Turner Endangered Species Fund (TESF) and a state representative…

Read more
- Jan 02, 2019
A World Without Elephants
A World Without Elephants

by Zoe Krasney

As I write this, I just learned about the horror of 87 elephants slaughtered for their ivory in Botswana in early September.

Read more
- Oct 17, 2018
F. Malby-Anthony’s Memoir of Conservation and Inspiration
F. Malby-Anthony’s Memoir of Conservation and Inspiration

by Georgia Woodroffe

Françoise Malby-Anthony and her husband, best-selling author Lawrence Anthony, ran the Thula Thula game reserve in South Africa together until he suddenly passed away in 2012.

Read more
- Sep 19, 2018
Book Review: Continental Divide
Book Review: Continental Divide

by Vicky Ramakka

This could be a coffee table book. It’s large, with the dimensions of a three-ring binder. It’s fat, at 292 pages, and it’s full of pictures. But don’t let your dinner guests flip through it — the full-page…

Read more
- Jul 18, 2018
Guarding Lions
Guarding Lions

by Georgia Woodroffe

Africa’s lion population has decreased by an estimated 50 percent in the last 50 years. Due to habitat loss, depletion of wild prey, poor livestock management and conflict with humans, it is believed that…

Read more
- Jul 04, 2018
Fighting for Survival: Lifting Up Indigenous Voices
Fighting for Survival: Lifting Up Indigenous Voices

by Sarah Abdelrahim

Indigenous peoples play a crucial role in protecting and advocating for global biodiversity. According to the United Nations, there are 370 million Indigenous peoples around the world — almost 5 percent…

Read more
- Jun 13, 2018
Terralingua and Biocultural Diversity
Terralingua and Biocultural Diversity

by Nejma Belarbi

Terralingua is an international nonprofit organization devoted to protecting and sustaining the biocultural diversity of life, which is the diversity of life in nature, culture and languages. All three…

Read more
- May 30, 2018
A New Way of Living in the World
A New Way of Living in the World

by Marilyn Clement

Susan Eirich created the Earthfire Institute Wildlife Sanctuary & Retreat Center in 2000 with an important goal in mind: changing the way that people see, and therefore treat, wildlife and nature.

Read more
- May 16, 2018
Taos Environmental Film Festival
Taos Environmental Film Festival

by Jean Stevens

“Seeking Harmony and Happiness in an Unsettled World” is the theme of the fourth edition of the Taos Environmental Film Festival, which will take place between April 18 and April 22 this year.

Read more
- Apr 18, 2018

[X] CLOSE☰ MENU