Ecology público
[search 0]
Mais
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Neste espaço estamos disponibilizando, gratuitamente, podcasts sobre ecologia, meio ambiente e biodiversidade. Também incluimos composições musicais de minha autoria, como forma de expressão da linguagem universal que é a música. In this space we are making free podcasts available on ecology, environment and biodiversity. We also included musical compositions of my own, as a way of expressing the universal language that is music.
  continue reading
 
A series of interviews from the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology, focusing on people and organizations working at the confluence of religious and ecological perspectives. Interviews cover four main areas: 1) new and forthcoming publications, 2) engagement in practice, activism, and advocacy, 3) teaching and curriculum, and 4) perspectives from environmental humanities. Our Vision is a flourishing Earth community where religious and spiritual traditions join together for the shared wellbein ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork

1
Ecology Everywhere

Ecology Everywhere

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Mensal
 
Three budding ecologists discuss new research across the ecological sciences, from genetic underpinnings to broad patterns. Topics include: behavioural ecology, population ecology, community ecology, evolution, and more!
  continue reading
 
A monthly show where we get to talk and learn about all things ecological, including interviews with top ecologists (both employers and employees), those working with ecologists, and also aspiring and inspiring career-seeking individuals setting out to make a difference. New episodes released first Monday of the month.
  continue reading
 
The One Humanity Lab Podcast: Into an Ecology of Wholeness explores the field of coaching from various angles through the lens of the e-Co Leadership Coaching program. The e-Co program is based on the perspective that we must first develop inner capacities in order to then expand outwards in our service to others. Inner capacities include a return to our dreaming, intuition, creativity, and grounded connectivity to people, communities, nature, and Source. Coaching is one of many containers f ...
  continue reading
 
Artwork
 
Nature isn’t just “out there” in some pristine or far-off location. It’s all around us, including right outside our doors. Join us as we ignite our curiosity and natural wonder, explore our yards and communities, and improve our local pollinator and wildlife habitat.
  continue reading
 
Your brand, your way. Create a clothing line that aligns with your brand, and your company using the best sustainably sourced materials in the world. We have a mission to educate people about what they put on their body. All clothes are not created equal!
  continue reading
 
Donna Gates, M.Ed., ABAAHP, is the international best-selling author of The Body Ecology Diet: Recovering Your Health and Rebuilding Your Immunity, The Body Ecology Guide to Growing Younger: Anti-Aging Wisdom for Every Generation, and Stevia: Cooking with Nature’s Calorie-Free Sweetener. An Advanced Fellow with the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, she is on a mission to change the way the world eats.
  continue reading
 
The Ecology Hour features in-depth interviews with experts on every facet of Mendocino County's diverse and spectacular natural world. Rotating hosts include Environmental Educators Hannah Bird and Sue Coulter, Scientists Bob Spies & Tim Bray, and Trail Steward Chad Swimmer.
  continue reading
 
Washington's Department of Ecology was the first environmental agency to be established in the U.S., back in 1970. We're headquartered in Lacey, with regional offices across the state, and are tasked with protecting, preserving and enhancing our environment for current and future generations. Here, we post stories from our our environmental programs as well as expertise in scientific research, creative problem-solving, complex project management, and innovative partnerships.Learn more about ...
  continue reading
 
Scientists are more than just their science. Science communication should be too! The W.E.E. Podcast will highlight awesome women in ecology and evolution - their research, their experiences, and their passions. Science is personal - get to know us! Each month I'll have conversations with women I admire, getting deep into the science they love, as well as what makes them tick outside the day job - and everything in between. We'll get into imposter syndrome, work-life balance, politics, and t ...
  continue reading
 
Sustainable World Radio brings you interviews with experts from around the globe; teachers, designers, environmentalists, and earth activists who learn from and work with Nature. Listen to episodes about Permaculture, organic gardening, herbal medicine, plants, fungi, earth repair, natural building, regenerative farming, sustainability, and ethnobotany. Tune in to discover positive solutions to environmental challenges; solutions that adhere to the Permaculture ethics of Earth Care, People C ...
  continue reading
 
Water Environment: Lakes, Rivers, Oceans, Seas, Groundwater, Wells - Water Conservation, Water Sustainability, Water Preservation, Water Ecology, and other H2O Environmental IssuesContact info: Clean@h2opodcast.com or 206-984-3260; http://H2Opodcast.com
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
O manguezal é considerado um ecossistema costeiro de transição entre os ambientes terrestre e marinho. Característico de regiões tropicais e subtropicais, está sujeito ao regime das marés, dominado por espécies vegetais típicas, às quais se associam a outros componentes vegetais e animais. Os manguezais são ecossistemas litorâneos que se formam na …
  continue reading
 
In this episode of Fire Ecology Chats, Fire Ecology editor Bob Keane speaks with Neil Williams and Melissa Lucash about how fire and climate change influence the boreal forests of Siberia by examining simulations. Full journal article can be found at https://fireecology.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s42408-023-00188-1…
  continue reading
 
Welcome to part 3 of our horticulture trial series. In the last two episodes, Dr Ian Smith helped us understand how to plan a scientific horticulture trial, and how to collect our data. In this episode, we're going to learn how to make sense of that data and put it to use. If you haven't listened to the previous two episodes yet, perhaps go and sta…
  continue reading
 
This is the final episode of our fourth season. In this short episode, our host gives a quick summary of how the podcast has grown in the last four years. Then he gives a brief overview of a new book on climate change from the German philosopher Peter Sloterdijk, Prometheus’s Remorse: From the Gift of Fire to Global Arson. It's a good account of th…
  continue reading
 
O que são combustíveis sustentáveis de aviação? Os gases emitidos pelos motores de aviões poluem o meio ambiente afetando a vida de espécies, inclusive a humana. A preocupação mundial sobre mudanças climáticas e a incerteza de abastecimento de petróleo tem levado a uma crescente demanda por fontes renováveis de energia. Com isso, estudos já foram f…
  continue reading
 
In last week's episode, friend of the show Dr Ian Smith taught us how to set up a horticulture trial. In this episode, he's going to teach us how to run a trial as well as how to collect and record data. The scientific approach is a disciplined way of finding the truth of the matter. Instead of going by our beliefs, we strip ourselves of preconcept…
  continue reading
 
A Segunda Guerra Mundial é frequentemente considerada um período de autossuficiência, camaradagem e ação que os britânicos podem revisitar em tempos de crise. Jardins da vitória surgiram e a condução prazerosa em transportes públicos foi praticamente eliminada para economizar combustível para as tropas. Diante de uma crise de custo de vida intensif…
  continue reading
 
Parece muito estranho, mas os cientistas estão estudando um tubarão que anda em terra. O tubarão "epaulette" é uma das 50 novas espécies descobertas próxima às montanhas da Foja, na Indonésia, em 2006. O tubarão epaulette usa as nadadeiras para se arrastar no fundo dos oceanos. Ele tem manchas pretas pelo seu corpo, seu ventre é branco e a parte de…
  continue reading
 
In this episode of Fire Ecology Chats, Fire Ecology editor Bob Keane speaks with Ashley Coble, Brooke Penaluna, and Laura Six about identifying key relationships between forested streams, fire, and large wood that change with fire severity and/or watershed stand age. Full journal article can be found at https://fireecology.springeropen.com/articles…
  continue reading
 
How are you trialling new approaches in the landscape? If you're like me, you're writing notes in an app (at best), or you're just keeping all of your ideas in your head (at worst). Did you know there's a better way? It's called the scientific approach, and it'd been pretty beneficial for society as a whole. Instead of approaching horticulture in a…
  continue reading
 
If you ask Tara Palacios about her passion for small businesses and entrepreneurship, she may answer you, “Small business is my schtick.” With a background in marketing and PR in the private sector and a stint helping her father reinvent his own career, Tara followed her gut, moving to a role where she could use her honed skills to help businesses …
  continue reading
 
This episode features Kathryn Lawson, PhD, lecturer in philosophy at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada. We discuss her new book, Ecological Ethics and the Philosophy of Simone Weil: Decreation for the Anthropocene, which was just released in the Environmental Ethics series at Routledge. We discuss her unique juxtaposition of the 20th-century Fr…
  continue reading
 
How can we protect trees during development? In this episode, consulting arborist Gary Moran and I explore his usual recommendations for clients wishing to protect their trees during development, whether that's for a private, commercial, or public project. Trees might take a long time to show stress, so just because it looks great when construction…
  continue reading
 
As tartarugas conseguem comunicar-se, mas só agora os seres humanos se dispuseram a ouvi-las. Um cientista estudou 53 criaturas aquáticas que, segundo se acreditava, não emitiam sons. E ele descobriu que, na verdade, elas conseguem se comunicar. No entanto, essas criaturas sempre emitiram suas mensagens, mas os seres humanos nunca haviam pensado em…
  continue reading
 
O manguezal é considerado um ecossistema costeiro de transição entre os ambientes terrestre e marinho. Característico de regiões tropicais e subtropicais, está sujeito ao regime das marés, dominado por espécies vegetais típicas, às quais se associam a outros componentes vegetais e animais. Os manguezais são ecossistemas litorâneos que se formam na …
  continue reading
 
This episode features our host, Sam Mickey, discussing the new posthumous publication from the French philosopher Bruno Latour, If We Lose The Earth, We Lose Our Souls, in which Latour calls upon Christians to join the struggle to avert a climate catastrophe. It's a short text that examines connections between cosmology, ecology, and Catholicism, i…
  continue reading
 
Por que o conhecimento dos oceanos é fundamental para proteger nossos ecossistemas marinhos? O impacto negativo do ser humano no meio ambiente não é novidade. Sempre nos recusamos a manter um equilíbrio com a natureza. Somos responsáveis ​​pela crise climática que estamos enfrentando. Vemos a mudança climática acontecendo debaixo dos nossos olhos e…
  continue reading
 
A sound understanding of hardscape elements is a good feather in the cap for any horticulturist, maintenance operator, or garden enthusiast. Sadly, most of us never get a chance to learn about this part of the garden because we only get to play in the dirt. In this episode, Joel Barnett (In Style Gardens, The Landscaping Podcast) guides us through …
  continue reading
 
This episode features Timothy Morton, PhD, Rita Shea Guffey Chair in English at Rice University and author of several books on ecological thought. We discuss their new book, Hell: In Search of a Christian Ecology (Columbia University Press, 2024). Escaping global warming hell, this revelatory book shows, requires a radical, mystical marriage of Chr…
  continue reading
 
Welcome to the Ecology Academy podcast, hosted by Richard Dodd. In this episode, we delve into the role and responsibilities of an Ecological Clerk of Works. With summer in full swing, ecologists are busy with surveys and monitoring projects across the UK and beyond. Whether you’re in the UK or elsewhere, this episode is packed with valuable insigh…
  continue reading
 
Em 2005, diversas árvores de pinheiro-amarelo com séculos de idade morreram de repente em 6 hectares de floresta na parte norte das Montanhas Rochosas, no Estado norte-americano de Montana. Elas estavam sendo dizimadas por besouros-dos-pinheiros, uma praga que se infiltra nas árvores, do tamanho da ponta de uma borracha de um lápis. No ano seguinte…
  continue reading
 
Life often leads us down unexpected paths, a truth Kwelli Sneed knows all too well. A graduate of the GWU e-Co Leadership Coaching Program, she now serves as the interim director of the Office of Neighborhood Safety Engagement. Initially joining as Chief of Staff during tumultuous times in the District of Columbia, Kwelli assumed the role of Direct…
  continue reading
 
I don't talk about myself much on this podcast - we tend to stick to the art and science of horticulture and interrelated disciplines. But I was recently interviewed by Joel Barnett about my recent move from Melbourne to Brisbane and the reasons behind it, my career journey, and the fact that my wife Kirstie and I are expecting a baby later this ye…
  continue reading
 
Cerca de 140 milhões de toneladas de lixo orgânico são geradas anualmente em todo o mundo. Dessas, cerca de 100 milhões de toneladas correspondem a resíduos da cadeia de produção e distribuição de alimentos. Apenas 25% do montante é reaproveitado. Os outros 75% são simplesmente “jogados fora”, configurando um grande desperdício de recursos potencia…
  continue reading
 
É um impulso humano natural e político recuar quando ameaçado por uma crise que parece além do nosso controle. O mundo está enfrentando vários desses estresses ao mesmo tempo: escassez de alimentos, inflação, persistência do COVID-19, guerras e os efeitos do aquecimento global. Coletivamente, eles ameaçam a estabilidade e a prosperidade de países a…
  continue reading
 
This episode features Missy Lahren, PhD, Chair of Board of Directors at Earth Law Center. Along with her work as a public interest lawyer, she is also a producer and writer. We discuss the many facets of her work, focusing in particular on her recent film, Last Stand: Saving the Elwha River's Legacy Forests. It premiered publicly at EarthX in Dalla…
  continue reading
 
Everybody wants a silver bullet for plant pests and diseases, but they usually end up causing more issues than they solve in the long run. Integrated Pest Management, or IPM, is an approach to managing pests in accordance with nature's rhythms. Instead of reaching straight for a chemical control, we can influence a number of factors that put pests …
  continue reading
 
Ever feel helpless about the state of the world? Investigative journalist Roberta Baskin discusses her shift to finding hopeful stories about businesses creating positive social and environmental impact. She talks about Aim2Flourish, a program she helped to start, and where students discover these companies and write stories that focus on the UN Gl…
  continue reading
 
This episode features Sara Jolena Wolcott, an ecotheologian, minister, healer, ceremonialist, consultant, singer, and founder of Sequoia Samanvaya—an organization dedicated to harmonizing with ancient wisdom. She is also the host of The ReMembering And ReEnchanting Podcast. We discuss some of the many facets of her interdisciplinary but also cross-…
  continue reading
 
Most people wouldn't consider a permaculture mindset for a public park or an ornamental garden. But that's a missed opportunity, because it could help individuals, organisations and councils reduce their maintenance budgets while increasing plant health and positive biodiversity outcomes. The 12 principles of permaculture can be applied whether or …
  continue reading
 
On the April 2024 episode, we delve into how best to support the environment through charitable giving. We hear from Tom Wheeler, Executive Director of EPIC in Arcata, CA, and from Lawyer Paula Goodwin of Perkins Coie, as well as take a closer look at a number of nonprofits. Check out our Primer for Giving! The show also features music from artist …
  continue reading
 
This week, we're celebrating 200 episodes! My mentor, Karen Smith, editor of Hort Journal Australia, interviews me about my picks for the "best" 10 episodes. To pick only 10 episodes was an impossible task, but I've narrowed it down to a few essential chats that I believe all my listeners should listen to at least once. From Integrated Weed Managem…
  continue reading
 
A importância do solo revela ao fato de ele ser um material solto e macio encontrado na superfície da crosta terrestre, sendo fundamental para a vida na Terra. Primeiramente, os solos variam muito na superfície da Terra. Tanto com relação à sua espessura quanto em relação às suas características. Tais como cor, quantidade e organização das partícul…
  continue reading
 
Pintar os telhados pode reduzir as temperaturas em até cinco graus. Não é tão comum no Brasil, mas em construções pelo mundo o uso da pintura branca nos telhados começa a ganhar mais adeptos. A grande razão para isso é o ganho de eficiência energética para a edificação. Pintar um telhado de branco pode reduzir entre 40% e 70% a temperatura nos ambi…
  continue reading
 
Um estudo holandês relatou pela primeira vez a presença de microplásticos no sangue humano, descoberta que levanta dúvidas sobre uma eventual penetração dessas partículas nos órgãos. Metade das amostras de sangue continha vestígios de PET (polietileno tereftalato), um dos plásticos mais usados no mundo, principalmente na fabricação de garrafas e fi…
  continue reading
 
In this episode, Kimberly Carfore returns to the podcast to talk about this year's Bioneers conference, which was held in Berkeley, California on March 28-30. Bioneers is a nonprofit environmental advocacy organization based in New Mexico and California. Founded in 1990 by Kenny Ausubel and Nina Simons, Bioneers (a neologism for "biological pioneer…
  continue reading
 
Did you get a chance to see Peter Donegan's phenomenal garden design A Moment In Time at the Melbourne International Flower and Garden Show (MIFGS) this year? We spoke about it in Ep.181 A Daydream Supported By A Series of Equations, but I wanted to touch in after the event finished to get his perspective on how everything went, and if he actually …
  continue reading
 
In this insightful episode of the Ecology Academy podcast, we explore the fascinating world of district licensing in ecological conservation with Sarah Garratt and Andy Buxton from NatureSpace. We delve into Sarah's contribution to NatureSpace's strategic licensing approach and Andy's role in the conceptualization of district licensing. Additionall…
  continue reading
 
The Melbourne International Flower & Garden Show has wrapped for another year! In this episode, I interview the designers behind three show garden highlights from this year's Show. We'll get to hear the inspiration behind the story and message behind each of their gardens, and we'll chat about their creative choices with materials and plant palette…
  continue reading
 
This episode features Clayton Crockett, PhD, Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion and the Director of the interdisciplinary Religious Studies program at the University of Central Arkansas. He has authored or edited a number of books at the intersection of theology, philosophy, science, and politics, including Religion, Politics an…
  continue reading
 
The Melbourne International Flower & Garden Show has wrapped for another year! Each year, we like to interview some of the garden designers to get an insight into what ideas, philosophies, trends, and plants are floating in the cultural zeitgeist. Friend of the show, Dr Ian Smith interviews some of the Boutique, Achievable and Border garden designe…
  continue reading
 
Agricultor suíço ensina a plantar água na Bahia. Uma pupunheira atrai uma multidão de pássaros japus à entrada de uma fazenda no sul da Bahia. Ela foi a primeira da temporada a produzir um dos frutos mais apreciados pelo dono da propriedade, mas mesmo assim ele decidiu deixá-los para os pássaros. O suíço Ernest Götsch diz que, enquanto várias práti…
  continue reading
 
All change starts with us; even that one little step has the power to create a profound transformation to the larger system. This is just one of the many pieces of wisdom that the Queen of Systems Thinking, Darcy Winslow, imparts to us in this episode. As the Founding President (2010-2020) and co-founder of the Academy for Systems Change, Darcy sha…
  continue reading
 
Join us for a follow up on a past episode on residential decarbonization., with some state forest news starting the hour: Segment 1: Richard Gienger on the Board of Forestry: www.savejackson.org www.pomolandback.com www.mendocinotrailstewards.org To send comments to the Board of Forestry: Publiccomments.@bof.co.gov Segment 2: Sonoma Clean Power Res…
  continue reading
 
Welcome to an enthralling episode of the Ecology Academy Podcast, where host Richard Dodd is joined by special guest Nikki Glover, a Senior Ecologist at Wessex Water renowned for her innovative newt detection techniques. Our dynamic conversation delves into Nikki's essential contributions to large-scale development infrastructure projects, her dive…
  continue reading
 
A garden is never finished. It's going to change throughout the year, and the seasons. It should be getting better over time instead of worse. And it should also provide you with multiple yields, whether that's a food crop, supporting biodiversity, reducing soil salinity, providing shade, making the space appear larger, or simply bringing you joy. …
  continue reading
 
We learn about Elephant Seals from Dr. Heather Liwanag, Associate Professor in the Biological Sciences at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. She studies the physiological adaptations of animals to their environment, and Elephant Seals provide her with many remarkable features to study. The largest and deepest-diving pinnipeds in the world, Elephant Seals ca…
  continue reading
 
This episode features Rabbi Ora Nitkin-Kaner, Reconstructionist rabbi and interdenominational climate change chaplain based in New Haven, Connecticut. As a rabbi, meditation teacher, climate change chaplain, and educator, she founded Exploring Apocalypse to extend her pastoral care work to help individuals and groups navigate the complexities of li…
  continue reading
 
Sydney. Or, click the AIH events link below. Diptera (flys) The Good Hoverfly Robber flies The bad Leaf miners Fruit flies (not vinegar flies) The inbetween Blowflies, bottle flies and house flies Fungus gnats Coleoptera (Beetles) Beneficials Ladybird (Coccinellidae) Ground beetles (Carabidae) Rove beetle (Staphylinidae) The neutrals Plague Soldier…
  continue reading
 
A ocorrência de gelo do Oceano Ártico proporciona o ambiente ideal para os ursos polares caçarem seu principal alimento: as focas, que usam as placas de gelo flutuantes para dar à luz e amamentar seus filhotes. No entanto, com a perda progressiva da cobertura de gelo nos últimos anos, a disponibilidade de presas diminuiu bastante. Sem o gelo, não t…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Guia rápido de referências