The story of America’s largest estuary, its vibrant ecosystem and the people who rely on its health. Season 3 explores spotlights "Wavemakers," people 40 years old and younger who are making an environmental difference in the Chesapeake Bay region.
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Connor Tupponce: How a Treaty from 1677 Can Help Save the Bay
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Connor Tupponce, a member of the Upper Mattaponi and Chickahominy tribes, discusses his work promoting tribal consultation in environmental and land-use matters in Virginia. Indigenous voices are crucial in managing public lands, he says. That's especially true at Werowocomoco, the recently rediscovered site along the York River that was once the s…
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Ron Lopez: Hunting Down Potentially Toxic Algae in a Major Virginia River
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Ron Lopez is a researcher in wetlands ecology at Virginia Commonwealth University who is part of a team breaking ground on our understanding of potentially toxic algae blooms in the Shenandoah River. His efforts toward developing remote-sensing methods to map those slilmy blooms are the basis of his ongoing doctoral thesis. So, yes, we will be talk…
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Symone Barkley: Why Our Children Need Environmental Education
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Symone Barkley, a Baltimore native, is a recipient of the North American Association for Environmental Education’s "30 Under 30 Award," which recognizes young leaders in the field worldwide. And she’s a fellow traveler in the podcast world, hosting a podcast series for her employer, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That would be…
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Grace Ziegmont: She Caught the EPA by the Ear, and Officials Listened
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The Pennsylvania 4-H chapter has named Grace Ziegmont as one of its state project ambassadors. These are members who provide guidance to 4-H staff statewide on programming and projects. The 16-year-old York County resident also serves as the president of the Governor’s Youth Council for Hunting, Fishing and Conservation. And we haven’t even gotten …
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Jay Fleming: Capturing the Chesapeake Bay's Disappearing History
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Jay Fleming has devoted his life to documenting a dying way of life on the Chesapeake Bay. He has compiled his photographs of watermen into two popular books. His photographs, more than anyone else's, tell the tale of of the estuary's seafood industry.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Maya Alexander: Building Stronger Connections Between the Black Community and Nature
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Helping others fall in love with nature is one of Maya Alexander's main passions. She is African American and has experienced first hand the challenges of engaging with the outdoors, a pasttime that has traditionally been associated with the white middle class. Yet, Alexander, a community engagement manager for Virginia's Alliance for the Shenandoa…
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Noah Bressman: Fighting Invasive Fish Species with Our Forks
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Noah Bressman, a Salisbury University researcher, has quickly made a name for himself as a marine biology researcher and a science communicator. He’s active on social media. He organizes fishing tournaments that incorporate environmental education. He envisions a world with fewer invasive fish in the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries -- a world ma…
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Carmera Thomas-Wilhite: Putting Environmentalism on a Path Toward Justice
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In early 2023, Carmera Thomas-Wilhite joined the Chesapeake Bay region’s most influential environmental group, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, as its first vice president for diversity, equity, inclusion and justice. How’d she get there? What’s her mission? Find out in our conversation.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Anna Killius: At the Center of Environmental Policy
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Anna Killius is a political wrangler. Her formal title: executive director of the Chesapeake Bay Commission. She occupies a space with few peers in American politics: a regional influencer of environmental policy with her sights set on a single watershed. Here, she discusses how she builds consensus -- and steers clear of infighting -- to drive bet…
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Randy Rowel: Overcoming a troubled youth to be a green mentor
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If anyone has the word "mentor" written all over them, it's Randy Rowel. He coordinates the Chesapeake Research Consortium's C-StREAM (Chesapeake Student Recruitment, Early Advisement, and Mentoring) program, helping to guide people of color into green careers. He talks with us about how the environmental sector can bring more diversity into its ra…
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Luke McFadden: The Influencer in Brown Coveralls
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Within three years, Luke McFadden has built a mini-empire on social media, accumulating 1.6 million followers on TikTok and hundreds of thousands more on other sites. He simply shows what life is like as a crabber on the Chesapeake Bay. No one has been more surprised with his success than the unassuming 27-year-old from Pasadena, Maryland.…
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Imani Black: Blazing a Trail in Aquaculture
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Imani Black founded Minorities in Aquaculture in 2020. In doing so, she set out to help people of color, especially women of color, enter the growing field of aquaculture. Aquaculture is the technical name for fish farming or, in this case, oyster farming. This is a story about seismic shifts in an industry, a Chesapeake Bay way of life. But it’s a…
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The federally led campaign to save the Chesapeake Bay is officially 40 years old. This season, we turn to movers and shakers in the Bay sphere who weren't born when the effort got started. With the cleanup facing a critical inflection point, these younger voices -- we call them "wave makers" -- offer a tantalizing glimpse into what the future may h…
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As climate change fuels more Agnes-like storms, what will we do to protect vulnerable communities? Tangier Island in Virginia's portion of the Chesapeake Bay offers clues.Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Tropical Storm Agnes reshaped the way the United States responds to natural disasters on a national scale. Here’s how.Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Environmental destruction wrought by 1972's Tropical Storm Agnes fanned the flames of the "Save the Bay" movement into a political wildfire in the Chesapeake Bay region. The storm's legacy is reflected in many current controversies, including the fate of the Conowingo Dam.Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Record-setting rainfall during 1972's Tropical Storm Agnes washed decades-worth of pollution into the Chesapeake Bay's fragile waters, damaging the environment for decades.Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Tropical Storm Agnes tested the limits of flood barriers. In Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, a wall wasn’t enough. This episode explores what the constant battle to hold back the Susquehanna River tells us about our current fight against climate change.Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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How a radio station in central Pennsylvania defied official weather experts and delivered an accurate flooding forecast during Tropical Storm Agnes.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Season 2 Trailer: Tropical Storm Agnes at 50
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Fifty years ago, “America’s Estuary” was beginning to show signs of ecological collapse. But outside of a handful of environmentalists and academics, few people took much note. When a seemingly harmless tropical storm charged up from the Gulf of Mexico, few people took much note of that either. But within a few wild and tragic days in June of 1972,…
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What matters most in the fight against climate change: individual action or collective action? Learn this and the best way to prepare a filet of blue catfish.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Agriculture is both a cause of and solution to climate change. Which will win out?Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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So You Think You Can Save the Chesapeake
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A massive effort to clean up the Chesapeake Bay faces more problems with a hotter, stormier world because of climate change.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Rising waters are swallowing historic sites along shorelines, portending a future in which we've lost key pieces of our past.Autor: The Chesapeake Journal
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What oysters in the sea and birds in the marsh tell us about our changing Chesapeake.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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President Trump told the mayor of Tangier Island that the community has nothing to fear from climate change. Experts aren't so sure.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Fighting sea level rise doesn't have to mean a huge construction project. Here, we examine policies and green solutions that could save coastal communities in the Chesapeake Bay region.Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Cities, from the small to the huge, prepare for a wetter future. We visit Alexandria, VA; Eagle Harbor, MD; and Norfolk to answer the question: Can we afford it?Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Wetlands are migrating to higher ground en masse. Barrier islands are losing the race to stay above water. And vast expanses of trees are transforming into "ghost forests." Hear how the natural world is responding to climate change in the Chesapeake Bay region.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Climate change is making it hotter. But communities of color are likely to feel the heat more. In Richmond, VA, solutions are being tested that could point the way for other American cities.Autor: Chesapeake Bay Journal
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A thousand-year flood is supposed to happen only once every thousand years, right? Wrong! Ellicott City was struck by such storms in 2016 and 2018. Was it climate change?Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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Climate change is happening here and now in the Chesapeake Bay region. Here is a preview of Season One of “Chesapeake Uncharted.”Autor: The Chesapeake Bay Journal
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