Finding Magic in the Great Bear Rainforest: A Photo Journal

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I’ve always thought of Dr. Seuss books as magical, transporting me to the most creative landscapes I’d ever known as a child. Winding shapes, curious plants, fantastical fauna…

So when I stumbled upon a Dr. Seuss-like forest along the rugged and remote coast of British Columbia, it occurred to me that maybe I’d discovered one of the most magical places on Earth.

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Truly, nothing else describes my spirit bear trip with Natural Habitat Adventures better than this singular word: magical. It may not have been a Dr. Seuss book, save for that one spot in the lush rainforest, but it was a different kind of magic, revealed in the green of the rainforest and the blue of the water. In the early-morning howls of wolves and the innocent gaze of a curious bear cub. In misty, fjord-shrouded meadows and the microcosms of wild mushrooms and berries.

And it was absolutely a photographer’s paradise at every turn! I’ve never experienced more joy trying to capture the essence of a place in an image than on this trip.

> Wildlife Guide: Spirit Bears

Here are a few of my favorite shots from this stunning adventure:

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The Island Roamer, a 68-foot sailing ketch and our home for 9 days.

 

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My Dr. Seuss moment in the forests surrounding Salmon Bay: red alder trees covered in mounds of moss.

 

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The Fiordland Conservancy.

 

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6:30am: Sipping coffee and enjoying a freshly baked blueberry muffin on the top deck while listening to wolf howls from our anchorage in Mussel Inlet.

 

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Searching for grizzlies in Mussel Inlet.

 

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Microcosms of the intertidal zone.

 

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Wild huckleberries.

 

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Shoreline wildlife in Mussel Inlet.

 

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Our expert and superbly talented Expedition Leader & resident photographer Melissa Scott reminded us to take note of the finer details in the landscape.

 

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Exploring the ghost town of Butedale.

 

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Our first spirit bear sighting!

 

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A white spirit bear mama and her two black cubs enjoy a salmon snack.

 

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A spirit bear carefully scans the water for fish.

 

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Magical sun rays shine down on our cozy bear-viewing spot by a creek. See the spirit bear on the right?

 

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A nose itch made for a bashful-looking bear!

 

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The incredibly lush habitat of the spirit bear.

 

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Having the right gear is essential.

 

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Wild mushroom growing on the side of a tree.

 

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A sunset kayaking excursion in Salmon Bay on the final evening of our trip.

 

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Watching a humpback whale from the Island Roamer deck.

Follow in Megan’s footsteps on Nat Hab’ Spirit Bears, Humpbacks & Wildlife of BC adventure. Learn more and see the full itinerary here.

All photos (c) Megan Koelemay.

The post Finding Magic in the Great Bear Rainforest: A Photo Journal first appeared on Good Nature Travel Blog.

New Study Shows the Positive Impacts Conservation has on Biodiversity

It was the early evening when we spotted our first jaguar, a male named Timbó, who was lounging in the tall grass of Brazil’s Pantanal, waiting for night to fall. We watched him closely from the safety of our safari transport, a vehicle that Timbó hardly noticed. This was thanks to the ongoing efforts of Onçafari. This conservation initiative aims to promote ecotourism and wildlife watching within several Brazilian biomes, and in the case of jaguars—transforming the image of this keystone species from one that people might hunt for profit into a source of sustainable tourism and income. By the time our safari was through, we’d spotted six jaguars in less than three days. I’d say their efforts are working. 

jaguar in a tree, Brazil Pantanal

© Helder Brandāo de Oliveira (Nat Hab Expedition Leader)

A new study published in the journal Science this April shows just how successful conservation efforts can be when it comes to protecting and maintaining biodiversity. In this first-of-its-kind meta-analysis to see the effects of conservation action overall, scientists from research institutes around the globe reviewed 655 implemented conservation measures that spanned more than a century and target different levels of biodiversity, including a variety of species, ecosystems, and genetics. After evaluating the changes to biodiversity that these measures have led to, compared to what would have happened without them, the results show that in two out of every three cases, the results were positive. At the very least, they slowed declines in biodiversity. 

 “This new analysis is the best evidence to date that conservation interventions make a difference, slowing the loss of species’ populations and habitats and enabling them to recover,” says Stuart Butchart, the study’s co-author and chief scientist at BirdLife International, protecting avian species worldwide. “It provides strong support for scaling up investments in nature to meet the commitments countries have signed up to.”

Butchart is likely referring in part to the United Nations Biodiversity Conference, a nearly two-week gathering of governments from around the globe in Montreal in December 2022. Here, nations are committed to several new global goals and targets that will be achieved by 2030. These include protecting 30% of the planet’s lands, inland waters, coastal areas and oceans, emphasizing areas of particular importance ecosystem functioning and services, as well as biodiversity—which the U.N. calls “our strongest natural defense against climate change.” 

Baobob trees of Madagascar

Baobob trees of Madagascar

How Biodiversity Loss Affects Us 

Biodiversity supports healthy ecosystems, including everything from clean air and fresh water to the pollination of crops. In turn, healthy ecosystems reduce the effects of climate change by acting as natural carbon sinks and both absorbing and storing carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere. Such ecosystems also allow species and organisms to work together to build strength, support life, and thrive. 

Declines in biodiversity also threaten wildlife. According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species, more than 44,000 species are at risk of becoming extinct, including critically endangered wildlife like the orangutans viewable on Nat Hab’s Wilds of Borneo Adventure and African forest elephants that live in the Congo and West Africa. The loss of such species would have a ripple effect, not only changing the dynamics among area wildlife but disturbing everything from the stability of an ecosystem to the livelihood of the people who depend on it. 

Orangutans, Borneo

Orangutans, Borneo © Brad Josephs (Nat Hab Expedition Leader)

Some Success Stories

A few things that have been working to improve the state of biodiversity include establishing and managing protected areas, eradicating invasive species, and restoring habitats while sustainably managing ecosystems. 

According to the study, the ongoing idea is to up the ante on such conservation interventions, which would go a long way toward stopping—as well as reversing—biodiversity loss. Some concrete examples of successful conservation efforts include Central Africa’s Congo Basin, home to some of the largest tropical rainforests on Earth. Here, deforestation was 74% lower in lands set aside for logging operations under a Forest Management Plan (FMP), which promotes sustainable timber extraction practices, compared with concessions without an FMP. Another is central Idaho’s Salmon River basin, where the captive breeding and release of Chinook salmon boosted the natural population of the basin’s fish exponentially with minimal negative impacts on its wild population. 

Grizzly Bear, Katmai National Park, Alaska

Grizzly bear fishing for salmon, Katmai National Park, Alaska

When conservation efforts work, they can really do a lot of good. In July 2023, Nat Hab even rounded up some of the most amazing conservation wins worldwide to showcase this very point. One is the more-than-doubling of wild tiger populations in India that’s occurred since 2010 (up from 1,411 to 3,167), thanks to rigorous conservation efforts from the country’s central and state governments, support from scientific institutions and NGOs and the involvement of local communities. Another is Australia’s practicing of effective conservation strategies, including policy changes and enhanced management of fishing vessels, which have led to the elimination of gill nets (walls of netting that can entail and harm, or even kill, marine mammals like bottlenose dolphins and sea turtles) in the Great Barrier Reef

Although conservation efforts aren’t always successful, those implementing the programs have been able to learn from their experiences and refine their methods accordingly. There are even cases in which an effort might prove unsuccessful for the species it was targeting but unintentionally beneficial for another form of life instead. For instance, while the population of seahorses in protected sites is lower than in non-protected areas, the number of seahorse predators—including octopus—has become much higher. 

River hugs the ocean arcing aerial views

Aerial view of river and ocean meeting in Australia

What Does This All Mean?

In essence, “Conservation matters!” says Gernot Segelbacher, co-author of the study and professor and co-chair of the Conservation Genetic Specialist Group (part of the larger International Union for Conservation of Nature). “While we so often hear about species declining or going extinct, this study shows that we can make a difference.”

Some methods of doing so include continuing to invest in nature in sustainable ways, such as focusing on the long-term benefits for people, nature, and the local economies rather than making short-term, financially based decisions. 

Another is in funding the effective management of protected areas, which safeguard critical habitats for species. 

Of course, conservation through exploration, the Nat Hab ethos, is another way of keeping biodiversity in check. Conservation travel not only showcases the value of natural habitats and the wildlife that thrives there, but it also brings economic resources to local communities and encourages them to protect the wilderness around them. 

The post New Study Shows the Positive Impacts Conservation has on Biodiversity first appeared on Good Nature Travel Blog.

Relics of Today’s World Feed an Uncanny Future in Max Hooper Schneider’s ‘Carnival of Gestation’
a sculpture of a microscope encrusted with minerals inside of a glass dome on a white pedestal

“Like Father Like Son 5” (2023), antique microscope, borax crystals, glass bell jar, 24.8 x 24.8 × 38.1 centimeters. Photo by Keith Lubow. All images © Max Hooper Schneider, courtesy UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, shared with permission

Within a fictional world where organisms adapt to strange circumstances and highly processed foods form the foundation for new life, Max Hooper Schneider’s uncanny sculptures (previously) address ever-evolving ecosystems. He explores relationships between comfort and uneasiness, growth and decay, the natural and synthetic, and toxicity and nourishment through a concept he calls the “Trans-Habitat.” Within this world, he illuminates an eerie, alternative future where living beings and human-made objects have melded through a continuous cycle of destruction, transformation, and re-creation.

Hooper Schneider’s first institutional solo show in China, Carnival of Gestation, opened last month at UCCA Dune in Beidaihe. Throughout the museum’s distinctively curving, organic architecture, the artist has suspended pill-like vitrines filled with plant specimens, encased crystallized microscopes inside glass domes, and installed luminous dioramas that cast plants in artificial light and vivid colors.

The exhibition features nearly 30 sculptures made during the past decade, including six new large-scale pieces commissioned by UCCA. Challenging an anthropocentric perspective of both the world and the act of making art, the artist merges seemingly conflicting species, objects, and ways of being in the world in an exhibition that is part wunderkammer and part parallel universe.

Hooper Schneider invites visitors into environments and ecosystems devoid of people yet inextricable from human influence. In “Like Father Like Son,” for example, microscopes encrusted in minerals are housed like artifacts of a bygone era, and in “Master’s Temple,” hanging vessels containing plants suggest a way of life for organisms may no longer be able to survive otherwise.

Carnival of Gestation continues through October 13. Explore more on the artist’s Instagram.

 

a diorama inside of a box with neon lights in orange and blue, filled with plants like an aquarium

“Kindschaft Portal: Fossil and Midnight Desert” (2022), custom fluorescent vitrine, vintage neon glass assemblage, mixed media, 35.6 x 22.9 x 30.5 centimeters. Photo by Sun Shi

a view of a diorama of mushrooms growing out of chicken nuggets, illuminated by a black light

“Forensic Blossom (Chicken Nuggets)” (2024), glass aquarium, UV borosilicate mushrooms, crushed uranium glass substrate, preserved snack foods and household items, silicone, epoxy resin, 20 x 20 x 20 centimeter. Photo by Sun Shi

a sculpture of a microscope encrusted with minerals inside of a glass dome on a white pedestal

“Like Father Like Son 2” (2023), antique microscope, borax crystals, glass bell jar, 25.4 x 25.4 x 38.1 centimeters. Photo by Keith Lubow

a tabletop diorama of a landscape covered in miniature liquor bottles

“Destiny” (2023), mixed media landform, condoms, miniature bottles, epoxy resin, silicone, mica powder, colored acrylic reservoir, 103.5 x 84.5 x 43.2 centimeters. Photo by Sun Shi

a view of a diorama of mushrooms growing out of sugary cereal, illuminated by a black light

“Forensic Blossom (Cereal)” (2024), glass aquarium, UV borosilicate mushrooms, crushed uranium glass substrate, preserved snack foods and household items, silicone, epoxy resin, 20 x 20 x 20 centimeters. Photo by Sun Shi

an installation view of sculptures at UCCA Dune in China, showing botanical sculptures on white pedestals and glass vitrines filled with plants hanging from the ceiling

Installation view of ‘Max Hooper Schneider: Carnival of Gestation’ at UCCA Dune. Photo by Sun Shi

a suspended installation of pill-shaped glass vitrines suspended from strings containing plant specimens

Detail of “Master’s Temple” (2024), glass, aquatic ecosystem, live shrimp, metal hook, 10 x 10 x 30 centimeters each. Photo by Sun Shi

a sculpture of a microscope encrusted with minerals inside of a glass dome on a white pedestal

“Like Father Like Son 1” (2023), antique microscope, borax crystals, glass bell jar, 20.3 x 20.3 x 30.5 centimeters. Photo by Keith Lubow

a sculpture of a modified fern and palm plant on a white pedestal

“Dendrite Bonsai (Fern and Palm)” (2024), copper electroplated fruits, vegetables, and shrub assemblage, 50 x 70 x 95 centimeters. Photo by Sun Shi

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Relics of Today’s World Feed an Uncanny Future in Max Hooper Schneider’s ‘Carnival of Gestation’ appeared first on Colossal.

Kelp: Coastal Sea Otter Help and Patagonia Cold Comfort
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Found in cold waters along a quarter of the world’s coasts, kelp forests are the foundations of many marine ecosystems. They also absorb enormous amounts of pollution, help sequester planet-warming gases and underpin coastal fisheries and the seafood industry—benefits valued at $500 billion a year.

Found along 25% to 30% of the world’s coastlines, kelp forests are the most extensive marine vegetated ecosystems in the world. A type of seaweed, kelp attaches to rocky surfaces on the ocean floor and—like terrestrial plants and trees—grows upward toward the sunlight. Some experts even call kelp “the sequoias of the sea.” It’s an appropriate epithet: stems of bull kelp can soar more than 100 feet high, and their canopies—the frond-like blades that tangle on the ocean surface—are visible from space.

Kelp forests harbor a greater variety and higher diversity of animals and plants than almost any other ocean community. Many organisms use the thick blades to shelter their young from predators or even rough storms. Underwater towers of kelp provide food and habitat for all kinds of marine life, including birds, crustaceans and other invertebrates, fish, sea lions, sea otters, seals, whales and several commercially important fishery species, such as kelp bass and black rockfish.

Unfortunately, however, today kelp forests face a variety of threats, such as commercial kelp harvesting, pollution and climate change, which exacerbates El Nino Southern Oscillation events and negatively impacts kelp reproduction and survival. Overgrazing by fish and sea urchins is a particularly large problem for kelp forests. Predators such as sea otters and sea stars typically keep populations of urchins and grazing fishes in check, but recent declines in sea otters and sea stars on the West Coast have led to an explosion in the number of urchins.

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In California, kelp forests are more extensive and resilient to climate change where sea otters have reoccupied the coastline. Where sea otters are absent, kelp forests have declined dramatically. In fact, sea otter population density is the strongest predictor of change in kelp canopy coverage.

But don’t count the kelp forests out yet. A recent discovery proves that these ecosystems are far older than we thought and thus have been through more environmental stress than we imagined. And along California’s Central Coast, growth of the southern sea otter population is helping kelp forests expand by increasing resilience to environmental challenges—including extreme ocean warming—nearly compensating for the kelp losses along both Northern and Southern California shores. In Patagonia, the giant kelp of the rugged southwest coast is thriving, showing remarkable stability for almost 200 years.

Pacific kelp forests: “old growth”

The unique underwater kelp forests that line the Pacific Coast support a varied ecosystem that was thought to have evolved in conjunction with kelp over the past 14 million years. But a new study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in January 2024 reveals that kelp flourished off the Northwest Coast more than 32 million years ago, long before the appearance of modern groups of birds, bivalves, marine mammals and sea urchins that today call the forests home.

The much greater age of these coastal kelp forests means that they likely were a main source of food for an ancient, now-extinct mammal called a desmostylian. The hippopotamus-sized grazer is thought to be related to today’s manatees, sea cows and their terrestrial relatives, elephants.

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Coastal kelp forests were probably a main food source for an ancient, now-extinct mammal called a “desmostylian.” This hippopotamus-sized grazer is thought to be related to today’s manatees, like the one shown here.

Scientists didn’t think kelp were older than 14 million years because the organisms associated with the modern kelp forest were not there yet. But this study shows that the kelp were there; it’s just that all the organisms that researchers expected to be associated with them were not.

Evidence for the greater antiquity of kelp forests comes from newly discovered fossils—found along the beach near Jansen Creek on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state—of kelp holdfasts, the root-like kelp parts that anchor them to rocks or rockbound organisms on the seafloor. The stipe, or stem, attaches to the holdfast and supports the blades, which typically float in the water, thanks to air bladders.

The authors of the study dated these fossilized holdfasts to 32.1 million years ago, in the middle of the Cenozoic Era, which stretches from 66 million years ago to the present. It was determined that the holdfasts lived in slightly warmer water than that of today, at the upper range of temperatures found in modern kelp forests. The oldest previously known kelp fossil, consisting of one air bladder and a blade similar to that of today’s bull kelp, dates from 14 million years ago and is in the collections of the University of California Museum of Paleontology.

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Newly discovered fossils of kelp holdfasts, the root-like parts that anchor kelp to rocks or rockbound organisms on the seafloor, provide proof of the greater antiquity of kelp forests. The stipe, or stem, attaches to the holdfast and supports the blades, which typically float in the water.

The only order of mammals that went extinct during the Cenozoic Era are the desmostylia. Kelp had long been suggested as a food source for these marine mammals, but actual evidence was lacking. The newfound fossil holdfasts indicate that kelp is a likely candidate.

These early kelp forests, however, were probably not as complex as the forests that evolved by about 14 million years ago. Detailed, 3D, X-ray scans through slices of the 32.1-million-year-old fossils revealed a barnacle, a mussel, a snail and tiny, single-celled foraminifera hidden within the holdfast, in addition to the bivalve on which it sat. That diversity of invertebrates, though, is not as high as would be found inside a kelp holdfast today. Fossils from the late Cenozoic along the Pacific Coast indicate an abundance of bivalves (clams, mussels and oysters), birds and sea mammals—including sirenians, related to manatees—and extinct, bear-like predecessors of the sea otter called Kolponomos. At 32.1 million years ago, the diversifying of organisms living in kelp forests had not yet started.

Kelp helper: sea otters

Moving ahead in time to just the past century, one of the biggest kelp forest supporters has been the sea otter.

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Southern sea otters were hunted to near extinction during the fur trade of the 1700s and 1800s. They survived because a few dozen animals eluded hunters off the rugged coast of California’s Big Sur.

In a paper published in the journal PLOS Climate in January 2024, California’s Monterey Bay Aquarium researchers show that sea otter population growth during the last century enhanced kelp forest resilience in the state. In fact, over the more-than-100-year period from 1910 to 2016, there was a significant increase in kelp forest canopy along the Central Coast, the only region of California where southern sea otters survived after being hunted nearly to extinction for their fur in the 1800s. At the century scale, the species’ favorable impact on kelp forests along the Central Coast nearly compensated for kelp losses along both Northern and Southern California coasts, resulting in only a slight overall decline statewide during this period.

Aquarium scientists used historical surveys of kelp forests dating back to the early 1900s to perform detailed estimates of biomass, canopy extent and carbon storage, while correcting for annual variations and differences in survey methods. This allowed the scientists to examine California’s kelp forest trends over a longer period, going back more than 60 years before available data from modern surveys based on aerial or satellite imagery. The team compared the corrected and conservative historical estimates to contemporary datasets, and then they used a machine-learning framework to assess the dominant drivers of change over the last century.

Statewide, the data showed only a 6% decline in kelp canopy from 1910 to 2016. Regional changes, however, proved more sizable. Kelp canopy decreased in northern and southern regions by 63% and 52%, respectively. Contrastingly, it increased nearly everywhere throughout the Central Coast, gaining an estimated 56% of kelp forest coverage.

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Recently, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that reintroducing sea otters to the Oregon coast would be feasible. It would help restore kelp forests to ecological balance by cutting down on the number of sea urchins.

While the modeling showed sea otter population density was the strongest predictor of change in kelp coverage, it also identified other factors, including extreme marine heat due to climate change. Today, extreme heat in the ocean affects more than half of its surface. This is a major problem for kelp forests, as chronic temperature stress undermines kelp growth and health. Returning sea otters to areas of their historical range could help recover kelp forests and restore their benefits in more places along the California coast.

Another kelp helper: Patagonia’s cool coastal waters

While giant kelp forests around the world have struggled to stay healthy in recent decades—with some vanishing altogether—Patagonia’s giant kelp forests, on the southern tip of Chile, look just as they did in the early 20th century.

Heat waves can drive changes in what species inhabit kelp forests, such as sea urchins and the sea otters who snack on them in the Northern Hemisphere. But high sea temperatures can also stress kelp directly, as kelp are best adapted for cooler waters. In northern and central Chile, unregulated direct harvesting by humans is devastating kelp forests, too. These threats have degraded many kelp forests over recent decades and led to losses of 2% every year.

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Along Patagonia’s rugged southwestern coast, giant kelp is thriving. It’s thought that frequent marine cold spells could be keeping kelp happy.

But nautical charts as far back as Charles Darwin’s 1831 HMS Beagle expedition and modern satellite imagery of kelp forests show that little has changed around Patagonia, despite climate change and human influence. To find out why, researchers analyzed sea surface temperatures from the southernmost 800 miles of South America’s coastlines from 1981 to 2020. They were looking for marine heat waves and cold spells. While heat waves stress kelp forests, they wondered what impact cold spells could have.

When glaciers melt, more cold water enters the ocean environment. This can create very short peaks in cool temperatures, from a few days to two to three weeks. Cool waters can act like air-conditioning for kelp, regulating their environment and keeping temperatures comfortable. The researchers, who published their report in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans in June 2022, found that South America’s southwestern giant kelp forests haven’t experienced an extreme marine heat wave since 1984 and, in fact, the area has had regular marine cold spells that are growing more intense. From 2014 to 2019, the region saw more severe and extreme cold spells than over the rest of the study period. Glacial melt and increased wind activity could explain these quick, localized cooling events. (Wind patterns that affect ocean surface circulation, heat fluxes or cold water traveling around Antarctica could also be factors.)

The outlook for these kelp forests may stay bright, at least for the immediate future. Current climate and ocean models predict that the Southern Ocean, the waters in which these thriving kelp forests live, will avoid dramatic warming. But as glacial melt increases, that freshwater can bring with it sunlight-blocking sediment, different sets of nutrients and even too-cold temperatures. Scientists don’t yet have well-defined windows for how long different kelp species can tolerate extremely cold water.

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In southern Patagonia, most of the lands surrounding the kelp forests are protected. However, that’s not always the case regarding the waters.

In addition, in southern Patagonia, most of the lands surrounding the kelp forests are protected, but not necessarily the waters. And in the northern regions of Chile, kelp forests are harvested for the alginate industry (alginate has applications in the dyeing, cosmetic, food, pharmaceutical, printing and textile industries), creating underwater deserts in environmentally favorable conditions. The researchers conclude that environmentalists, local communities, nongovernmental organizations and current governments should make kelp protection a priority.

Kelp continuance: otters and onward

Healthy kelp forest ecosystems provide us with many benefits, including contributing to carbon storage, reducing coastal erosion from storms and serving as nursery grounds for fisheries. And once washed up on the beach, kelp wrack plays a major part in the beach food web, feeding a highly productive community of small invertebrates—crustaceans and insects—that are in turn a favorite food of shorebirds. In many ways, we’re still on the cusp of learning more about the value kelp forests have for the environment and, thus, for us.

The conservation and recovery of endangered sea otters is one potential, nature-based solution for restoring kelp forests along the California Coast—and, perhaps, beyond.

Here’s to finding your true places and natural habitats,

Candy

 

The post Kelp: Coastal Sea Otter Help and Patagonia Cold Comfort first appeared on Good Nature Travel Blog.

Otherworldly Flora and Futuristic Creatures by the Haas Brothers Illuminate the Nasher Sculpture Center Grounds
a blue tree sculpture with strawberry shaped and colored lights hanging from the branches

“The Strawberry Tree” (2024), cast bronze, blown glass, glass beads, Pele de Tigre marble, and light, 171 x 188 x 176 inches. Photo by Kevin Todora. All images courtesy of the Nasher Sculpture Center, shared with permission

A bizarre botanical collection sprouts from the grounds at Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas. A tall, spindly specimen with a droopy head illuminates a walkway, while a sprawling tree lush with strawberries looms large in a gallery. Patinaed in an otherworldly blue, these cast bronze sculptures seem like they’ve emerged from a radioactive swamp or been transplanted from a distant planet.

On view in the exhibition Moonlight, the strange organisms are the latest project from fraternal twins Nikolai and Simon Haas, who work together as the Haas Brothers. The pair conjure a magical nighttime glow with formidable sculptures that double as lamps. Outfitted with lights, each work approaches functionality with a fantastical bent, preferring to radiate from suspended glass strawberries or a singular, cycloptic bulb in the case of “Emergent Zoidberg.”

A tribute to a character from Matt Groening’s animated series Futurama, the plump figure twists around and cranks its neck sideways, its flailing mouth frills encircling the light. Other childhood favorites figure into the exhibition, too, including the Wooden Wiggly Snake with its signature writhing body. The brothers emulated such familiar forms through 3D computer graphics software, ultimately transforming a simple streetlamp into a whimsical character.

If you’re in Dallas, see Moonlight through August 25. Otherwise, find more from the artists on Instagram.

 

a detail photo of a blue tree sculpture with strawberry shaped and colored lights hanging from the branches

Detail of “The Strawberry Tree” (2024), cast bronze, blown glass, glass beads, Pele de Tigre marble, and light, 171 x 188 x 176 inches. Photo by Kevin Todora

a blue figurative sculpture with a single glowing eye and an appendage that wraps dramatically around the side

“Emergent Zoidberg” (2024), cast bronze and light, 96 x 62 5/8 x 62 1/8 inches. Photo by Kevin Todora

a detail of a blue figurative sculpture with a single glowing eye and an appendage that wraps dramatically around the side

Detail of “Emergent Zoidberg” (2024), cast bronze and light, 96 x 62 5/8 x 62 1/8 inches. Photo by Kevin Todora

a detail photo of a blue tree sculpture with strawberry shaped and colored lights hanging from the branches

Detail of “The Strawberry Tree” (2024), cast bronze, blown glass, glass beads, Pele de Tigre marble, and light, 171 x 188 x 176 inches. Photo by Simon Haas

a detail photo of a blue tree sculpture with strawberry shaped and colored lights hanging from the branches

Detail of “The Strawberry Tree” (2024), cast bronze, blown glass, glass beads, Pele de Tigre marble, and light, 171 x 188 x 176 inches. Photo by Simon Haas

a bright blue lamppost outside on the sidewalk with blue flower like tendrils covering the light

“A Light in the Streets and a Freak in the Sheets” (2023), cast bronze and light, 193 x 35 5/8 x 52 1/4 inches. Photo by Kevin Todora

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Otherworldly Flora and Futuristic Creatures by the Haas Brothers Illuminate the Nasher Sculpture Center Grounds appeared first on Colossal.

New Nat Hab Nature Journeys Exclusively For Women Travelers

Interested in a nature encounter exclusively in the company of women? An adventure where you can relax and be yourself, push your comfort envelope as much or as little as you wish, and learn from outstanding female naturalist guides in the world’s most wondrous wild places?

Nat Hab is thrilled to announce the expansion of a series of small-group nature journeys exclusively for women travelers!

Women in the Wild trips are a curated selection of Nat Hab’s top itineraries, which offer inspiring encounters with nature while championing women and their stories.

Women in the Wild

“Nat Hab’s Women in the Wild adventures offer a supportive and uplifting environment where women can explore nature under the passionate guidance of our women Expedition Leaders,” says Renata Haas, Nat Hab’s Head of Adventures, North America. “Our women-only departures build an immediate and meaningful community while empowering women to reconnect with their inner ‘wild.’” 

Natural Habitat Adventures & WWF Women in the Wild wilderness conservation tourism sustainable travel

Renata Haas, Nat Hab’s Head of Adventures, North America © Dana Cama

Nat Hab launched its Women in the Wild series in 2023, to immediate success. “With overwhelming demand to offer more, we’ve increased our capacity for women-only trips by 75% in the last year alone and plan to double that again by 2025,” says Haas.

From the Arctic to Africa and beyond, Women in the Wild trips cultivate connections among women of all ages and life contexts. The program welcomes women traveling solo, with friends, partners, or multi-generational family members. Itineraries are designed to animate and empower women as they embrace new discoveries in a supportive all-women setting.

female expedition leader naturalist wildlife guide and female traveler women in the wild nature adventures conservation sustainability empowerment photography camera sony sony alpha

© Jim Beissel

In intimate travel groups averaging just nine guests, Nat Hab’s highly accomplished women Expedition Leaders, including Ph.D. scientists, wildlife biologists, and conservationists with extensive field experience, offer guests deep insight into wildlife, ecosystems, and natural and cultural history. Departures also facilitate connections with local women in the places visited.

New Women-Only Trips in Africa, Alaska and Beyond

Alaska Bear Camp

Be immersed in pristine brown bear habitat at Nat Hab’s private fly-in camp in Lake Clark National Park. Guests participate in guided bear viewing and wilderness walks with expert women bear naturalists. They will also get to know the camp’s female manager, who has helmed this wilderness outpost for nearly 20 years.

Natural Habitat Adventures & WWF Women in the Wild Alaska Bear Camp women travel Alaskan wilderness conservation tourism sustainable travel

Nat Hab guests feeling empowered after a visit to Nat Hab’s Alaska Bear Camp from Lake Clark National Park ranger © Jessica Morgan

Beluga Whales & Arctic Wildlife of Churchill

Experience the Arctic summer in Churchill, Manitoba. Led by a woman naturalist guide, enjoy wildlife encounters, including kayaking with beluga whales and spotting polar bears, and connect with women elders from First Nations, Métis, and Inuit communities to hear their inspiring stories of life in the North.

female expedition leader naturalist wildlife guide women in the wild nature adventures conservation sustainability conservation travel empowerment belugas polar bears Churchill Manitoba Canada

Belugas, Bears & Summer Wildlife of Churchill Nat Hab Expedition Leader Judy Wilson

East Greenland Arctic Adventure

Witness Arctic marine life and massive icebergs calved from the Greenland ice sheet from Nat Hab’s private Base Camp Greenland. Stay in deluxe heated tent cabins and enjoy fresh chef-prepared meals. Activities include Zodiac outings, glacier-view hikes, kayaking, and discussions on the impact of climate change in the Arctic with women experts.

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Women in the Wild adventure in Iceland © Jackie Weston

Iceland: Circling the Land of Fire & Ice

Explore Iceland’s dramatic landscapes with an all-women team, inspired by intrepid 13th-century Viking adventurer Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir. Soak in geothermal hot springs, walk atop lava fields, tour historic sites, and learn about the key roles of women in contemporary Icelandic society.

Kingdom of the Monarchs

Spot millions of monarch butterflies in the highlands of Central Mexico as you ride horseback into butterfly sanctuaries, learn about local conservation projects, and visit women-led artisan cooperatives.

female expedition leader naturalist wildlife guide and female traveler women in the wild nature adventures conservation sustainability empowerment mexico monarch butterflies monarch butterfly migration WWF World Wildlife Fund

Expedition Leader Josy Cardoso leading a Women in the Wild trip to Mexico to witness the annual monarch migration © Fer Romo

Natural Jewels of Costa Rica

Encounter the wild wonders of Costa Rica! Observe women-led conservation initiatives while exploring jungle canals by boat, hiking misty cloud forests, and visiting women-run coffee farms.

Secluded South Africa

With a top woman safari guide—still a rarity in Africa—scout for the Big Five and more on South Africa’s savannas while learning about the diverse ecosystems that support its legendary wildlife, and the women protecting it through conservation and anti-poaching efforts.

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© Andrew Morgan

Women Are Champions of Conservation

Nat Hab’s Women in the Wild series showcases the critical role women play in conservation. Studies show women are disproportionately affected by biodiversity loss and climate change, which creates challenges with accessing water and vital resources in affected regions. Nat Hab trips provide essential support for community-based conservation projects that combat these issues and generate economic empowerment for local communities.



“The impact of bringing women together to intimately witness the natural world spurs a ripple effect for active and meaningful discourse and change,” says Haas. “This communion is at the core of our brand ethos and our larger mission of fostering environmental activists, conservationists, and changemakers.” 

Women in the Wild trips are available to book now for 2024 and 2025. Visit our website to view all of our Women in the Wild trips and check out our blog to read inspiring stories from our female guests, guides and writers.

The post New Nat Hab Nature Journeys Exclusively For Women Travelers first appeared on Good Nature Travel Blog.

Rooted in Nature: Ancient Techniques Shape Climate Adaptation in Portugal’s Wine Industry

The production of wine has always been impacted by changes in the weather. Winemakers refer to a year’s vintage as hot and dry, for example, when conditions create higher sugar contents that result in a fuller bodied wine. That’s the way it’s always gone; some years were better than others.

The global challenges facing the wine industry as a result of climate change are different in scale and severity. Hail and heat, fires and floods…

France recently saw its smallest harvest since 1957; costing the industry approximately $2 billion in sales. One vineyard that normally produces up to 50,000 bottles of champagne produced nothing at all after drenching rains and a heatwave. The California wildfires of 2020—and similar events from Australia to Argentina, and across Europe—not only destroyed vines; smoke can ruin grapes up to 100 miles away. In 2022, Portugal experienced a particularly severe fire season, resulting in nearly 260,000 acres burned.

Traditional port wine boat on the Douro River in the city of Porto

Traditional port wine boat on the Douro River in the city of Porto

Why are wines particularly vulnerable to the perils of climate change? Many agricultural products are far less fragile or susceptible to minor changes in weather. Wine, however, has always been valued precisely because of its sensitive nature. As a result, viticulture is on the front line of climate adaptation.

In the world’s oldest demarcated wine-making region, ancient traditions drive responses to contemporary challenges.

Portugal’s Ancient Traditions Contribute to Climate Resilience

Portugal has a wine-making history dating back two thousand years. Despite its small size, roughly the same as the US state of Indiana, Portugal is the fifth-largest wine producer in the European Union and the eleventh-largest in the world.

Portugal’s wine industry is deeply interwoven with the country’s socio-economic landscape, closely associated with its local cultural heritage and traditions, and plays a pivotal role in local economic and social stability in rural areas. Viticulture is responsible for 1.5% of Portugal’s GDP. Portugal is also the world’s largest producer and exporter of cork, with exports of €1.133 billion in 2021.

It’s long winemaking tradition, coastal location, varied ecosystems, and seafaring history have contributed to over 250 native grape varieties in Portugal. There are 31 DOC (Denominação de Origem Controlada) wine regions and 14 IPR (Indicação de Proveniência Regulamentada) wine regions across the country.

Traditional winemaking with winepress and helical screw

Traditional winemaking with winepress and helical screw

How do Portugal’s ancient winemaking techniques shape climate adaptation strategies? Here are are ways three very different winemaking regions — Alentejo, the Douro River Valley, and Pico Island in the Azores — are drawing upon ancient traditions to adapt to contemporary conditions.

These regions exemplify the challenges faced by the wine industry due to climate change, and how they draw bothinspiration and sustainable practices from their rich winemaking heritage to secure a sustainable future.

Castle of Valongo, Alentejo region

Castle of Valongo, Alentejo region

Alentejo: Nurturing Tradition for Climate Resilience

The Alentejo region is the largest wine region in Portugal, accounting for 30% of the country’s total wine production. Renowned for its full-bodied red wines, Alentejo is diversifying its portfolio with increased emphasis on white and rosé wines, reflecting both market trends and climate adaptability. This diversification may help winemakers adapt to rising temperatures.

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The region, in southern Portugal, is characterized by a hot and dry climate, at risk of desertification. Alentejo’s winemakers have long drawn inspiration from ancient techniques passed down through generations to adapt and thrive in this challenging environment. One of those ancient techniques is the use of traditional clay amphorae, known as talhas. This ancient method of fermentation and aging imparts unique flavors to the wines and allows winemakers to better control the impact of temperature variation, a critical factor in the face of climate change.

Rainwater harvesting and the construction of intricate water channels, known as levadas, have been practiced in Alentejo for centuries. These techniques have efficiently distributed water to crops and communities, ensuring a sustainable water supply even during droughts. Thanks to these traditional practices, Alentejo has managed to cope with water scarcity better than many other regions.

Madeira archipelago forest trail water system for wine making Rainwater harvesting and the construction of intricate water channels, known as levadas

Levada

The region’s embrace of organic and biodynamic farming practices not only contributes to environmental sustainability but also enhances soil health and biodiversity. Alentejo is a biodiversity hotspot, home to numerous endemic plant and animal species. The region’s diverse flora, fauna and agroforestry traditions serve as a natural buffer against climate challenges, contributing to ecosystem resilience. Over 135 plant species can be found per square meter in Alentejo’s cork oak woodlands.

Adding to Alentejo’s allure as a wine destination is its significant growth in wine tourism, attracting over 1 million visitors in 2019. Tourists flock to the region to immerse themselves in its rich winemaking heritage and experience its unique terroir firsthand.

Alentejo has witnessed the rise of collaborative initiatives involving local communities, conservation organizations, and governmental bodies. These partnerships work toward preserving traditional practices, restoring degraded ecosystems, and fostering climate-resilient agriculture. Notably, the Green Heart of Cork project, led by World Wildlife Fund (WWF), has been recognized as a successful model for nature restoration, contributing to climate resilience.

Douro River Valley: Ancient Terraces Guarding the Future

Douro river valley, Portugal

Douro River Valley

The Douro River Valley stretches nearly 400 miles across northern Portugal east of Porto, and is the oldest demarcated wine region in the world, dating back to 1756. Its ancient terraced vineyards showcase Portugal’s wine industry’s resilience and adaptability.

As rising temperatures and extreme weather threaten grape varieties and viticulture, winemakers in the Douro have turned to their unique centuries-old methods to provide the resilience that is their hallmark. Vineyards in the Douro River Valley are built on beautiful, stacked stone terraces known as socalcos, built by hand over centuries, to prevent soil erosion on the steep hilly slopes and to optimize sun exposure for grape growth. This method evolved over hundreds of years for the sustainable cultivation of grapes in the challenging terrain of the region. They play a vital role in preventing erosion, optimizing water usage, and maximizing sun exposure, crucial aspects in adapting to changing climate patterns.

Additionally, stone walls supporting the terraces act as heat sinks, moderating temperature fluctuations and protecting the vines.These ingenious structures navigate the rugged terrain, prevent soil erosion, and optimize grape cultivation.

Stacked stone terraces known as socalcos

Socalcos

The region’s focus on indigenous grape varieties promotes biodiversity and reduces the need for chemical interventions. This allows many wineries to practice organic and biodynamic farming methods, promoting soil health and eliminating harmful pesticides. Numerous wineries in the Douro Valley hold certifications from sustainable wine organizations, like the Sustainable Winegrowing Program, further reinforcing their commitment to responsible viticulture.

The traditional foot-treading method, employed in Port wine production, gently extracts juice from grapes in stone lagares. This technique ensures better control over tannin levels, contributing to the complex and well-balanced flavors of Port wine.

Over 74,000 acres of vineyards in the Douro Valley are dedicated to Port wine production. The region’s sustainability efforts encompass an integrated approach to land and resource management, preserving its cultural landscape.

buckets of grapes for wine production vineyard portugal douro river valley

The Douro River Valley offers a captivating journey through history, stunning landscapes, and a commitment to sustainable winemaking practices. For those who love nature, conservation, and travel, this wine region promises a delightful experience. Nat Hab’s Paddling Portugal’s River of Wine trip offers an unmatched opportunity to kayak the river by day and enjoy food and wine in authentic Portuguese vineyard estates or quinta at night. The valley’s storied heritage and breathtaking terraced vineyards are emblematic of the resilience and adaptability of Portugal’s wine industry. What better way to see them than from the water by day and from the inside at night?

Volcano Pico-Azores Portugal

Volcano Pico-Azores

Pico Island: Stony Resilience on Windy Volcanic Rock

The Azores archipelago, made up of nine islands, is located in the Atlantic Ocean, midway between Europe and North America. The Azores wine region is made up of three appellations of origin, Graciosa, Biscoitos (on Ilha Terceira) and Pico.

Pico Island is home to the highest point in the Republic of Portugal, volcanic Mount Pico rises 7713 feet above sea level and last erupted in 1720. The island’s volcanic soils and maritime influences create a unique terroir, which was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2004, as the “Landscape of Pico Island Vineyard Culture.”

Verdelho is the most famous and most grown grape variety in the Azores. It is thought to be originally from Sicily or Cyprus and was brought to the Azores by the Franciscan Friars who cultivated it throughout the islands.

UNESCO World Heritage Site, vineyard inside lava walls at Criacao Velha on Pico Island in Azores

A vineyard inside lava walls at Criacao Velha on Pico Island in Azores

Pico Island’s winemakers are pioneers in climate adaptation, employing centuries-old sustainable practices based on the island’s delicate ecosystem. The island’s vineyards are planted in what’s called currais, traditional stone-walled enclosures that protect the vines from salty ocean winds and retain heat. Sustainable water management techniques, such as rainwater harvesting, are essential for coping with the island’s limited freshwater resources.

The number of wine producers more than doubled between 2015 and 2020, reaching over 500. Wine production grew from 73,968 gallons in 2016 to 153,220 gallons in 2019. Wine tourism and whale watching are the main activities here, as Pico lies in what WWF has dubbed a blue corridor or whale superhighway.

Nat Hab travelers guests go on vineyard tour in Douro River Valley Portugal Casa De Casal De Loivos

Nat Hab guests take a tour of the vineyards at Casa De Casal De Loivos © Daniel Blankenheim

See for Yourself: Experience Portugal’s Ancient Traditions & Support Local Communities through Wine Tourism in Portugal

Portugal’s winemaking regions of Alentejo, the Douro River Valley, and Pico Island exemplify the challenges faced by the global wine industry in the era of climate change. By embracing sustainability and adapting to the changing climate, these regions are not only preserving their ancient winemaking traditions but also exemplifying adaptative strategies for the industry.

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The artistry of Portugal’s winemakers lies not only in the mastery of modern techniques but also in their reverence for ancient practices that have stood the test of time. The marriage of tradition and modernity in the Portuguese wine industry reflects a harmonious union between human innovation and nature’s resilience.

As climate change continues to drive temperatures higher and increase extreme weather, the proactive and innovative efforts of Portugal’s winemakers offer a beacon of hope for other wine regions worldwide. Through sustainable viticulture practices, the preservation of biodiversity, and responsible resource management, the Portuguese wine industry demonstrates that it is possible to savor the world’s finest wines while also savoring a sustainable future.

Experience Portugal’s sustainable wine culture and more on our Paddling Portugal’s River of Wine adventure!

The post Rooted in Nature: Ancient Techniques Shape Climate Adaptation in Portugal’s Wine Industry first appeared on Good Nature Travel Blog.

Conserving the Khata Corridor: A Transboundary Triumph for Tigers

The Khata Corridor, a critical 15-mile wildlife passage along the shared border of Nepal’s Bardia National Park and India’s Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary, is a beacon of hope for tiger conservation in South Asia. This vital link, facilitating safe movement for tigers and other wildlife between Nepal and India, underscores the importance of transboundary conservation efforts in preserving biodiversity and enhancing genetic diversity.

Restoration & Adaptation in the Khata Corridor

Two decades ago, the Khata Forest was a degraded landscape ravaged by human encroachment, deforestation, and poaching. The situation was dire, with local communities heavily dependent on forest resources for their livelihoods. The 1950s saw a surge in settlement due to Nepal’s resettlement programs and malaria eradication, further straining the fragile ecosystem. By the 1990s and early 2000s, the forest’s condition had worsened due to widespread encroachment, livestock grazing, and the spread of invasive species.

In response to this crisis, WWF, local communities and the Nepalese government embarked on an ambitious project to restore the Khata Forest. The initiative aimed not only to rehabilitate the ecosystem but also to secure a safe passage for tigers and other wildlife and engage the local community in conservation efforts.

tiger forest india

© Surya Ramachandran

Community-Led Conservation: A Blueprint for Success

The cornerstone of this effort was community engagement, transforming the local attitude toward conservation.

WWF’s strategy involved extensive community consultations, awareness programs, and the introduction of sustainable livelihood schemes. These initiatives were designed to reduce the community’s dependence on forest resources, thereby alleviating pressure on the ecosystem.

One of the key components of the Khata Corridor project was the establishment of community forests. Today, a network of 74 community forests covering 78 square miles plays a crucial role in the corridor’s success. These community forests are managed by over 9,000 households, who benefit from sustainable income opportunities and access to irrigation and safe drinking water.

Alternative energy programs were introduced to replace household reliance on firewood, further reducing deforestation. Restoration activities have included the establishment of nurseries, planting native tree species, and allowing forests to regenerate naturally by regulating cattle grazing.

Hear from a local community organizer, homestay host, and a young member of a community anti-poaching unit in WWF-Nepal’s video, Life in Nepal’s Khata Wildlife Corridor.

The transformation of the Khata Corridor has had a profound impact on both wildlife and local communities. The once-degraded forest is now a lush habitat teeming with life. Camera traps have captured images of a wide array of wildlife, including leopards, spotted deer, gray langurs, greater one-horned rhinos, and the critically important Bengal tigers.

Recent data shows an increase in wildlife activity within the Khata Corridor, highlighting its success. This indicates a thriving ecosystem and the effectiveness of the corridor in providing a safe passage for wildlife.​​

Tigers, a keystone species, play a pivotal role in maintaining the health of the ecosystem. They require large territories to roam and hunt, with an adult male tiger in Nepal needing about 7 to 58 square miles. The Khata Corridor ensures wildlife can move safely between habitats, which is essential for genetic diversity and the overall health of the ecosystem.

3 tigers walking India

© Aditya Panda

The corridor has also been instrumental in the recovery of other species, such as the greater one-horned rhino. Once near extinction, the population has rebounded significantly, thanks to concerted conservation efforts in both India and Nepal. The Khata Corridor’s success in facilitating wildlife movement and supporting biodiversity has earned it recognition as one of the most successful local community initiatives in the larger Terai Arc Landscape.

The resurgence of wildlife in the Khata Corridor has had a positive ripple effect on local conservation travel. Increased wildlife sightings have attracted travelers, providing a sustainable source of income for local communities.

Awareness and securing livelihoods were critical steps in motivating communities for stewardship in conservation.

Celebrating Transborder Conservation Achievements

The Khata Corridor has garnered international acclaim for its conservation achievements. WWF’s efforts have been pivotal in nearly tripling Nepal’s tiger population from 121 in 2009 to 355 in 2022. The corridor’s success in facilitating tiger movement between Bardia National Park and Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary exemplifies the positive impact of well-planned and managed wildlife corridors.

In India, similar conservation efforts have yielded impressive results. The Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve, for instance, was recognized for doubling its tiger population since 2010. These achievements underscore the effectiveness of dedicated conservation initiatives in reversing the decline of tiger populations and enhancing biodiversity.

The Khata Corridor is a shining example of how transboundary cooperation can lead to significant conservation successes.

tiger drinks water reflection india

© Conan Dumenil

The Broader Terai Arc Landscape (TAL)

Located in the shadows of the Himalayas, the transboundary Terai Arc belt stretches from Nepal’s Bagmati River in the east to India’s Yamuna River in the west, connecting 16 protected areas across both countries. In Nepal, the Terai Arc Landscape (TAL) covers a vast area of 9,540 square miles with a network of six protected areas, forests, agricultural lands and wetlands, with over six million people depending on its forests for food, fuel, and medicine. 

A key characteristic of TAL is the presence of eight corridors and two bottlenecks; a landscape conservation approach that facilitates wildlife dispersal between protected areas on either side of this transboundary landscape while also engaging local communities in forest restoration and management.  

The Khata Corridor is a crucial component of the larger Terai Arc Landscape, home to a rich diversity of flora and fauna, including tigers, rhinos, leopards, and giant hornbills. This landscape-based approach to conservation aims to protect and connect fragmented habitats, ensuring the long-term survival of wildlife.

Tigers, in particular, benefit from this interconnected landscape. As apex predators, tigers help regulate the populations of prey species, which in turn affects the composition and health of vegetation. By maintaining a balanced ecosystem, tigers contribute to the overall biodiversity and resilience of the region.

tiger and cubs india

© Aditya Panda

Challenges and Future Directions

Despite the successes, the Khata Corridor and the broader TAL face ongoing challenges. Human-wildlife conflict, habitat fragmentation, and climate change continue to threaten the delicate balance of the ecosystem. To address these issues, ongoing efforts are needed to strengthen community engagement, enhance habitat connectivity, and implement adaptive management strategies.

One of the critical areas for future focus is mitigating human-wildlife conflict. As tiger populations recover, interactions between tigers and local communities are likely to increase. Effective conflict mitigation strategies, such as livestock compensation schemes and community-based monitoring, are essential to ensure the continued coexistence of humans and wildlife.

Additionally, climate change poses a significant threat to the region’s biodiversity. Changes in temperature and precipitation patterns can alter habitats and disrupt the availability of resources for wildlife. Adaptive management strategies that incorporate climate resilience into conservation planning are crucial for the long-term sustainability of the Khata Corridor and the TAL.

tiger side profile India

© Surya Ramachandran

Ensuring the Future of Tiger Conservation in Nepal and India

The Khata Corridor stands as an example of how collaborative conservation efforts can restore degraded landscapes, protect wildlife, and benefit local communities. The success of this transboundary corridor highlights the importance of community engagement, sustainable livelihood programs, and innovative conservation strategies in achieving long-term conservation goals.

As we look to the future, continued support for initiatives like the Khata Corridor is essential. By fostering cooperation between governments, conservation organizations, and local communities, we can ensure that wildlife corridors continue to thrive and provide safe passage for tigers and other species. Together, we can create a world where humans and wildlife coexist in harmony, and the majestic roar of the tiger echoes through the forests of Nepal and India for generations to come.

Explore More: India Tiger Quest + Nepal & Bhutan

Nat Hab continues to support these conservation efforts through their specially curated travel experiences. Our most tiger-intensive itinerary is the India Tiger Quest, which provides participants with the best opportunities to spot and photograph Bengal tigers in their natural habitat.

Nat Hab’s Wild & Ancient Himalaya: Nepal & Bhutan expedition includes rhino tracking in Nepal’s Chitwan National Park, offering a unique glimpse into Nepal’s rich biodiversity. Ideally situated on the edge of the Rapti River, our Chitwan base is in the largest area of undisturbed wilderness along the base of the Himalayas. The surrounding area has a high sighting rate for one-horned rhinoceros, crocodiles and gharial.

Chitwan National Park, established in 1973, is Nepal’s first national park and was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1984. It covers 360 square miles of subtropical lowlands and is home to about 50 mammal species and more than 500 species of birds. While sightings are never guaranteed, we have good chances to observe rhinoceros, Asian elephants, crocodiles, leopards, sloth bears, sambar deer, wild boar, monkeys and jungle fowl in their natural habitat. This is not a tiger-focused itinerary, but fingers crossed, and conditions permitting, a chance to track tigers might be a special highlight as we join our Expedition Leader and a local guide to search for footprints and pugmarks that mark the tigers’ hidden presence in the park.

Since 2003, Nat Hab has partnered with WWF, the world’s leading environmental organization, to promote this mission. To date, Nat Hab has provided more than $6 million to support WWF’s global conservation efforts and will continue to give 1% of gross sales plus $175,000 annually through 2028 in support of WWF’s mission to conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth. Our travelers have donated an additional $40 million in support of WWF priorities in some of the most precious yet imperiled places on the planet. WWF currently has more than 2,000 conservation projects in progress around the world. Take a look at some of the important work that’s happening in these destinations. 

By participating in conservation travel, you not only embark on an unforgettable adventure but also play a vital role in supporting the ongoing efforts to protect our planet’s most vulnerable species. Each journey helps raise awareness and funds essential for the continued success of projects like the Khata Corridor, ensuring that the legacy of conservation endures for future generations.

tiger safari india

© Yaju Upadhyaya

The post Conserving the Khata Corridor: A Transboundary Triumph for Tigers first appeared on Good Nature Travel Blog.

The Unprecedented Presence of People Weighs on Wildlife
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The International Union for Conservation of Nature classifies lions as vulnerable and estimates that only 23,000 remain in the wild. World Wildlife Fund states that while lions are not currently endangered, population numbers will continue to decrease without proper conservation efforts.

In our human-dominated world, Earth’s most iconic and imperiled wildlife are facing tough decisions. Two lion brothers recently illustrated that fact when they undertook a long, record-breaking swim across a predator-infested African river in search of homes and mates. Although there was a small bridge over the river, it’s thought the lions avoided it because of the presence of people.

Around the world, runaway human population growth is collapsing the role of wildlife in the world’s ecosystems. From deforestation to disease, from habitat fragmentation to lead poisonings, and from vehicle collisions to the wildlife trade, the human impact on wild animals is formidable.

What can we do to lessen our dominance and damage? Scientists say that conserving about half of the global land area could maintain nearly all of nature’s contributions to people (NCPs) and still meet biodiversity targets for tens of thousands of species. There’s work to do, however: most of the lands prioritized for NCPs are at risk of conflict with human development, with only 18% of that land area currently protected.

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Queen Elizabeth National Park in Uganda is backed by the Rwenzori Mountains, also known as the “Mountains of the Moon” because of their snowcapped peaks. The park also provides visitors with stunning, panoramic views of crater lakes (such as the one above) carved into the green, rolling hills.

The literal lengths African lions will go to in order to avoid us

On February 1, 2024, a drone equipped with high-definition, heat-detection cameras captured some incredible footage. Two male lions were filmed in Uganda at night swimming across the Kazinga Channel, a waterway connecting Lake Edward and Lake George. The channel is a popular feature of the country’s Queen Elizabeth National Park.

The pair of big cats had previously been seen attempting to cross the channel three times before, but on each occasion, they were turned back to shore shortly after entering the water due to what appeared to be an animal trailing them—possibly a hippopotamus or a Nile crocodile. On the fourth attempt, the lions’ 0.62-mile crossing was successful.

Locally, the lions are known as “Jacob” and “Tibu.” Jacob has a harrowing history: some members of his family were poisoned for the lion body-part trade, he has been gored by a buffalo, he was caught in a poacher’s snare, and he lost one leg when it was caught in a second poacher’s steel trap. The population of lions that Jacob and Tibu belong to has nearly halved in just five years.

The fact that the two brothers have managed to survive as long as they have in a national park that has experienced significant human pressures and high poaching rates is a feat of resiliency, say the researchers who filmed the epic swim. Their paper on the topic was published in the science journal Ecology and Evolution on July 10, 2024.

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Within Queen Elizabeth National Park is the Kazinga Channel. Its shores draw large numbers of wildlife, such as antelope, buffalo, crocodiles, elephants, hippos, waterbuck—and two daring lions.

But why did Jacob and Tibu risk the dangerous night crossing in the first place? Scientists theorize that the brothers were looking for females. Competition for lionesses in the park is fierce, and they had lost a fight for female affection in the hours leading up to the swim. So, it’s likely the duo mounted the risky journey to get to the females on the other side of the channel. There is a small connecting bridge to the other side, but the presence of people, say the researchers, was probably a deterrent.

The worst threat to wildlife across North America and Canada is us

Africa’s Jacob and Tibu aren’t the only animals floundering under the preponderance of people. Here, on the North American side of the planet, wildlife is feeling our weight, too.

In wildlife rehabilitation centers across Canada and the United States, licensed individuals and organizations take in hundreds of thousands of injured and sick wild animals every year. In fact, such centers see the highest number and greatest range of species of any government or nonprofit organization in the U.S., giving them unique insights into animal health—and making them great bellwethers of what’s happening in the broader environment.

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Wildlife rehabilitation centers see the highest number and greatest range of species of any government or nonprofit organization in the U.S. This gives them a unique insight into animal health in the broader environment.

A few years ago, a biologist named Tara Miller, who was then working with Defenders of Wildlife, met Wendy Hall, cofounder of the Adirondack Wildlife Refuge in Wilmington, New York. Hall mentioned some weird occurrences she had noticed in her job over the last few years: black vultures in the Adirondacks, which was unusual since they are typically a southern species; and earlier “baby seasons” in many species, which researchers have linked to climate change. Miller was intrigued by the idea of using animals’ presence in rehab centers to study the impact of climate change and people on North America’s wildlife.

Miller is the lead author of a first-of-its-kind study, published in Biological Conservation in October 2023. The study compiled hundreds of thousands of records from 94 wildlife rehab centers across Canada and the United States to investigate the threats facing more than a thousand wildlife species by region, including which threats affect which animals and how effective these centers are at treating their patients.

In summer 2019, Miller began contacting employees of wildlife rehab centers, which varied in size from those rescuing a few hundred animals a year to groups helping tens of thousands. She asked what trends they had noticed and what questions they would like answered through a report.

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Black vultures have been making their way north due to milder weather caused by climate change. Ornithologists in New York have recorded more than 300 sightings in the last year. That number would have been unheard of 30 years ago, say researchers.

Until recently, most wildlife rehab records existed only in binders and file cabinets, which made them inaccessible to researchers. But slowly, over the last decade or so, centers have started to digitize their documents, thanks in part to software such as the Wildlife Center of Virginia’s WILD-ONe patient database for wildlife rehabilitators. This gigantic dataset has more than 600,000 observations. The big question for Miller was, what are the major threats to wildlife?

The data revealed that 40% of animals were sent to rehab centers because of injuries classified under the “human disturbances” category. These included bald eagles sickened by lead poisoning, big brown bats colliding with buildings and sea turtles entangled in fishing gear.

Seasonally speaking, the researchers found vehicle collisions were highest from May to July and disproportionately affected reptiles. Pesticide poisonings increased in the spring, summer and early fall, a time of more agricultural and construction activity. Lead poisonings tended to be seen in the winter, after hunting season. Many hunters still use lead ammunition when deer hunting, which will then poison scavengers like bald eagles and vultures when they go in to snack on a carcass.

In addition, the investigation showed that more animals were admitted to wildlife rehab centers the week after extreme weather events than the week before—following floods and hurricanes in southern Florida, for example. More animals were also taken in after big storms in recent years, possibly due to the increasing intensity and frequency of extreme weather events.

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Scientists say pelicans do well after rehabilitation; 68% of injured pelicans are later released back into the wild.

About one-third of the animals brought into wildlife rehab centers are eventually released back into the wild, though this number varies significantly among species. For example, about 68% of injured pelicans are later released, whereas only about 20% of bald eagles have that option.

These findings tie together what rehabbers across the country are seeing: the big picture of how humans are impacting wildlife. Miller says that we should be thinking about the issue in terms of disaster and response plans. Do we need to boost state funding to animal rehabilitation centers to be able to care for wildlife after catastrophic events? How can we change our behaviors and policies to impact animals less?

In the meantime, the results of this study can hopefully convince communities to make some fairly easy changes to protect animals. Wildlife underpasses and overpasses across roads can help deer, turtles and other animals cross highways safely (and reduce car accidents). Adding decals and other patterns to windows can save birds. And educating the public on how to phase out lead fishing gear and hunting ammunition can cut down on poisoning in scavengers. Some states have lead ammunition buyback programs, and more could establish them.

These changes will help humans, too: for example, car-deer collisions are not only expensive to fix but can be deadly for all parties.

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Only about 20% of injured bald eagles that recover at rehabilitation centers, however, can be released. Scientists wonder why the full recovery chances are so different between bald eagles and pelicans.

The “Humpty-Dumpty effect” of us

Some of the world’s most spectacular and unheralded mammals are now slipping away, such as Bhutan’s takins, Patagonia’s huemuls, Tibet’s wild yaks and Vietnam’s saolas. Even Africa’s wildebeests and three species of zebras have suffered massive reductions over the last several decades.

The reasons for these losses are more than deforestation, disease, habitat fragmentation or the wildlife trade, according to researchers at Colorado State University and their colleagues around the world. Ultimately, the cause is rampant human population growth. And unless human behavior changes in unprecedented ways, states the research team, future communities of these mammals will never resemble those of the recent past or even today.

In 1830 when Vice Admiral Robert Fitzroy captained his ship, the HMS Beagle, through the Strait of Magellan at the southern tip of South America, fewer than 1.2 billion people inhabited Earth. By Earth Day in 1970, there were more than 3.5 billion. Today, slightly more than 50 years later, the world’s population exceeds 8 billion. Livestock and humans now constitute a staggering 97% of the planet’s mammal biomass.

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Legend has it that Drukpa Kunley, a Bhutanese poet and yogi popularly known as “the Divine Madman,” combined the head of a goat with the body of a cow to create the takin, now Bhutan’s national animal. The takin’s conservation status is vulnerable.

In a report published in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution in June 2020, the Colorado State University scientists described how they analyzed direct and indirect disruptions that lead to changing roles of mammals in global ecosystems. They noted how the nature of ecological interactions has changed and will continue to do so—on an even larger scale—in coming decades.

More specifically, the researchers looked at what has transpired with coyotes and wolves in North America, huemuls in Patagonia, takins in Bhutan, wild horses in deserts, and the inevitability of change in big ecosystems as humans extirpate large carnivores and increase their footprints on the land.

For example, humans have only recently colonized parts of the Himalayas, areas where ice has receded due to warming temperatures. But the scientists’ findings showed that even in the remote reaches of the Himalayas, feral and stray dogs—a direct result of human intrusions—wreak havoc on wild species that have high cultural importance and economic value.

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Patagonian huemuls live in the rugged regions of the southern Andes. They are diurnal and have well-developed senses of hearing, smell and vision. When alarmed, huemuls snort and stamp their front legs. With less than 1,500 individuals left, they are listed as endangered.

Worldwide, food webs have become irretrievably altered by humans, with little hope to reconstitute even recent past conditions or to put back the ecological functions once created by native species. Feral pigs, for instance, exist today on every continent except Antarctica and in 70% of the states in the U.S. These animals disrupt birds, fish, reptiles other small mammals, plants and soils. In addition, human-caused climate change warms the oceans, which in turn foments marine algal blooms, reducing fishery catches. With less fish, a consequent uptick in wildlife poaching on land occurs.

The scientists also documented how an appetite for fashion like cashmere increases imports to the West from China, India and Mongolia, resulting in economic incentives for desert pastoralists to produce more domestic goats in central Asia. These goats compete with native species for food. And domestic dogs that pastoralists introduce are not only predators but also carriers of diseases that jeopardize endangered species, such as kiang (a large horse of the Tibetan Plateau), Przewalski’s gazelles and snow leopards.

Despite these grim findings, the study’s authors suggest that all is not yet lost. While for many assemblages of animals, we are nearing a moment in time when—like Humpty-Dumpty—we will not be able to put things back together again, the world still has some remarkable protected areas, including Kruger National Park and Serengeti National Park in Africa, the Patagonia Ice Fields of Argentina and Chile, Madidi National Park in Bolivia, Chang Tang Nature Reserve in China, Northeast Greenland National Park (the world’s largest national park), and Yellowstone National Park and Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve in North America.

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We’re fortunate that the world still has some remarkable protected areas, such as Yellowstone National Park in the United States.

And although food webs with large mammals will be different from those of the past, there are options to shape the future. We need to use our ecological grief, say the authors, to implement action and honor the exceptional biodiversity that remains. This can be done by protecting large tracts of the planet’s wild places.

Only 18% of lands prioritized for nature’s contributions to us are protected

That brings me back to E. O. Wilson’s theory on conserving half of global land area in order to maintain nearly all of nature’s contributions to people (NCPs) and still meet biodiversity targets for tens of thousands of species. Even 30 x 30 would be a good start. Unfortunately, a new study, published in the journal Nature Communications in January 2024, shows that only 18% of lands prioritized for NCPs are protected.

This study, led by researchers at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, is based on a global-scale optimization of land uses to identify joint priorities for biodiversity and NCPs. Focusing on regions of high conservation value that are also under high development pressure reveals some unlikely areas that don’t always garner global conservation attention; these include working landscapes in southeastern Australia, southern Brazil and Uruguay, Eurasia and the southeastern United States.

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In the areas of commercial agriculture and renewable energy, more multifunctional landscape planning would be highly beneficial. One example of this is to allow livestock grazing on wind farms.

Findings showed that roughly half (44% to 49%) of global land area, excluding Antarctica, provides nearly all (90%) current levels of nature’s services to people while also conserving biodiversity for 27,000 species of amphibians, birds, mammals and reptiles. But the results also point to potential conflict, because 37% of the land areas are highly suitable for development by agriculture, renewable energy, oil and gas, mining or urban expansion. Such high development potential, coupled with the fact that few priority areas are currently protected, means that successful conservation will require creative solutions.

Such solutions will carefully accommodate human activities through sustainable use and multifunctional landscape planning, particularly in the growing areas of renewable energy and commercial agriculture. Examples of this include livestock grazing under the turbines of wind farms or cultivating native pollinator gardens under solar panels.

But there’s a real risk that achieving renewable energy goals could conflict with nature conservation goals. We now know that biodiversity, climate change and sustainable development cannot be considered in isolation. Nature’s many contributions to human well-being—including carbon storage, clean water, coastal protection, crop pollination and flood mitigation—must also be factored in.

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Solar panels and pollinator gardens do mix! We can generate renewable energy while nurturing and protecting the natural world around us.

For as English writer Alan Watts wrote, “Just as there is an interdependence of flowers and bees, where there are no flowers there are no bees, and where there are no bees there are no flowers. They’re really one organism … . The essential point is obvious: that each one of us, not only human beings but every leaf, every weed, exists in the way it does, only because everything else around it does. The individual and the universe are inseparable.”

Here’s to finding your true places and natural habitats,

Candy

 

The post The Unprecedented Presence of People Weighs on Wildlife first appeared on Good Nature Travel Blog.