What are rose-ringed parakeets doing in London, or in Tokyo, or Amsterdam, or in Glasgow…? Learn about how escaped pets birds are colonizing cities around the globe. Matt Halley joins us to talk about his own parrot field work and … Continue reading →
Nov 06, 2016•1 hr 15 min
What’s cooler than turtles breaking a bite-o-meter? High school urban ecology research assistants, that’s what! We had so much great conversation with Tobias Landberg from Episode 13 that we’re posting some more of it as a bonus episode. Tony and Tobias … Continue reading →
Oct 21, 2016•27 min
Urban wildlife can’t always take care of itself. Herpetologist Tobias Landberg of Arcadia University joins us as we take our podcast to Mexico City with Luis Zambrano of the Reserva Ecologica del Pedregal de San Angel and a project to … Continue reading →
Oct 13, 2016•1 hr 8 min
Tony Croasdale was always a birder. But before he was a podcast host, an environmental educator, or a biologist, he was a anarcho punk star with R.A.M.B.O. This bonus episode features Tony’s ex-bandmate and fellow naturalist Bull Bolo, Liam Wilson of the … Continue reading →
Sep 26, 2016•1 hr 38 min
Any city in the world you go, you will find birders. To prove it we bring you conversations with guest host Keith Russell, of Audubon PA, as well as birders from around the world. In Part 2 Tykee James and … Continue reading →
Sep 11, 2016•39 min
Any city in the world you go, you will find birders. To prove it we bring you conversations with guest host Keith Russell, of Audubon PA, as well as birders from around the world. In Part 1 we join Keith … Continue reading →
Sep 11, 2016•40 min
It’s hard to appreciate wildlife when it’s eating your food or giving you asthma. Michelle Niedermeier of the Penn State Cooperative Extension’s Integrated Pest Management program joins Billy and Tony to talk about how to get along with our non-human neighbors without … Continue reading →
Aug 21, 2016•50 min
No theme this week, just an episode jam packed with some of our favorite urban mammals: We talk about the fruit bats (flying foxes) that call Australian cities (and lots of Asian and African cities too) home with Maree Treadwell Kerr of … Continue reading →
Aug 01, 2016•54 min
We had so much fun with cemeteries that we made two episodes! We record as guests of guest host Jessica Baumert, director of the the historic Woodlands Cemetery in Philadelphia. There we learned about their grave-digging ground hogs, shagging stags, and … Continue reading →
Jul 16, 2016•48 min
We had so much fun with cemeteries that we made two episodes! We record as guests of guest host Jessica Baumert, director of the the historic Woodlands Cemetery in Philadelphia. There we learned about their grave-digging ground hogs, shagging stags, and … Continue reading →
Jul 16, 2016•40 min
We’re not just urban wildlife podcasters, Tony and Billy are urban bikesplorers! Spoke Magazine and Hidden City set it up, and on Sunday June 19th we linked up with our podcast’s BFF Robin Irizarry of the Tookany/Tacony/Frankford Partnership to explore … Continue reading →
Jun 26, 2016•46 min
Barred owls? Yep. Peregrine falcons? Got them too. Black sparrowhawks? You betcha! Osprey, tawny owls, and great horned owls also come up in the conversation with Rob Bierregaard as we stake out his backyard screech owls and talk about urban birds … Continue reading →
Jun 16, 2016•1 hr 21 min
How do you connect urban kids with the nature next door? We talk to Justin Twist from Environmental Learning for Kids at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge near Denver, Hendra Aquan of Transformasi Hijau (Green Transformation) in Jakarta, and … Continue reading →
Jun 02, 2016•45 min
Cities can rally ’round all sorts of mascots, even unconventionally charismatic micro fauna like beetles and salamanders. We talk with Nathan Bendik, who works to protect Austin, TX’s spring and cave salamanders, and we hear about York’s (UK) tansy beetles … Continue reading →
May 16, 2016•51 min
This week we explore the Urban Caracal Project with Dr. Laurel Serieys and fawn over the most charismatic urban mesofauna we’ve seen to date (get a load of those ear tufts!). Caracals might have been enough to discuss on a … Continue reading →
Apr 30, 2016•45 min
Join Billy, Tony, and guest host Ken Frank as we explore history through our many-legged neighbors and hitchhikers. Environmental Archeologist Allison Bain of Université Laval in Quebec City, Canada tells us how insects can teach us about the European colonization of North … Continue reading →
Apr 15, 2016•49 min
Get inspired with urban corals and urban shaliks. Hannah Waters joins us as we hear from Coral Morphologic‘s Colin Foord to talk about the corals of Miami’s gritty waterways and art installations based on Miami’s marine life. Our synanthropic organism … Continue reading →
Mar 28, 2016•47 min
We celebrate World Sparrow Day (March 20th) with a look at Passer domesticus, a bird North American birders love to hate, but that is in a mysterious decline in its native Eurasian range. We hear from Mohammed Dilawar, founder of … Continue reading →
Mar 20, 2016•37 min
Pigeons might join us in cities to take advantage of resources like nesting spots and tasty crumbs. Leopards and hyenas might join us in cities to take advantage of resources such as tasty dogs… not hot dogs; we’re talking about Canis … Continue reading →
Mar 06, 2016•52 min
We want to hear from YOU. We’re working hard on Season Two – researching urban wildlife topics and recording interviews and expeditions, but we also want to involve you in our upcoming episodes. We know that our listeners are nature … Continue reading →
Dec 19, 2015•4 min
(FT Hannah Waters) Nature writer Hannah Waters joins us as we talk about Benjamin Rush’s sugar maples with David Hewitt and then, in a rambling, kind of boozy interview, we discuss the five-lined skinks of Pier 53 with biologist and … Continue reading →
Oct 30, 2015•50 min
(FT Robin Irazarry) What’s the biggest wild animal in your city? Is it a fish the size of a car? Guest host Robin Irazarry, Philadelphia Watershed Coordinator for the Tookany/Tacony Frankford Watershed Partnership (TTF) and the brains behind #HerpingTheHood, joins us as we listen to … Continue reading →
Oct 14, 2015•55 min
(FT Julie Ulrich of The Nature Conservancy) Fishing isn’t just a way to connect with aquatic wildlife. Avid fisher and sociologist Len Albright of Northeastern University talks about urban fishing and how one striper can help an urbanite engage with … Continue reading →
Sep 21, 2015•37 min
(FT Scott McWilliams and Ali Hurwitz) Tony flies to Miami to add some urban exotic birds to his ABA list, but pre-games with the American Birding Association‘s Jeff Gordon and George Armistead. Billy embarks on a sidewalk flora expedition with the Chrysler … Continue reading →
Sep 04, 2015•53 min
(FT Lori Hayes) Philadelphia Parks and Recreation‘s Lori Hayes, general naturalist about town, joins us to talk about what hooks kids into nature and how cities might have more to offer them than you might think, all while we listen … Continue reading →
Aug 16, 2015•47 min
(FT Christian Hunold) Which is the better gateway drug to nature, squirrels or hawks? Christian Hunold, wildlife photographer and Associate Professor of Political Science at Drexel University joins us to talk about red tailed hawks and ecological citizenship as we … Continue reading →
Aug 03, 2015•45 min
(FT Nelson Melendez) Who is tiptoeing past your door tonight? Is it a cat? Is it a coyote? Is it a coyote with a dead cat in its mouth? Troi and Riana of Your Wild Life‘s Cat Trackers bring da Rouckus and … Continue reading →
Jul 17, 2015•1 hr 3 min
(FT “President” Tykee James) Wildlife can be big, and wildlife can be small. In either case it can be right under our noses without our knowing it. In Episode 2, we turn to some of the smaller critters we don’t … Continue reading →
Jul 01, 2015•1 hr 1 min
(FT Michael McGraw and Matthew Halley) In this episode Billy talks to one of his literary idols, Thomas Palmer, about Palmer’s classic Landscape with Reptile: Rattlesnakes in an Urban World, and to rattler researcher Anne Stengle about the current state of … Continue reading →
May 30, 2015•59 min
Q: How do huge animals get right up close to millions of people who don’t even know they’re there? A: Water. Whales are actually in it while reticulated pythons use the canals and ditches that drain Southeast Asian cities to … Continue reading →
May 03, 2015•31 min