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Today, we’re introducing a new podcast from Wisconsin Sea Grant called The Water We Swim In, which features stories about the Great Lakes and the people working toward equity.On “Hidden Currents,” Bonnie Willison and Hali Jama dive beneath the water to explore why Black children are drowning more than any other race, why marginalized communities often lack access to swimming pools, and how to stay safe in the water. We hear about the alarming trend facing swimming pools in cities across the nation, relive a fight to save one Milwaukee pool, and walk the shores of Lake Michigan with the Beach Ambassador program. Join us as Brenda Coley, Jumana Tanner, Cheryl Bledsoe, Sally Callan, and Deidre Peroff discuss how racism, segregation and redlining has taken away Black people’s access to water and, essentially, the right to swim.Find The Water We Swim In here
Today, on the last episode of season two, we’re talking about climate change, which threatens to upend everything western science understands about native and invasive species.
First, we join the Great Lakes Indian Fish & Wildlife Commission climate change team as they carefully observe the seasonal relationships between all the beings in the forest. Then we talk to the Tribal Climate Adaptation Menu team, who are helping tribal nations find ways to assert their knowledge and adapt to climate change. Finally, we step back 20,000 years to see what paleoecology can teach us about how species move as the climate changes.
Thank you to our guests Rob Croll, Hannah Panci, Sara Smith, Jerry Jondreau and Jack Williams.
GLIFWC’s Climate Change Program - http://glifwc.org/ClimateChange/
GLIFWC’s Phenology study - http://glifwc.org/ClimateChange/PhenologyStudy.html
Dibaginjigaadeg Anishinaabe Ezhitwaad - A Tribal Climate Adaptation Menu - http://www.nicrn.org/tribal-climate-adaptation-menu.html
More on climate change impacts in Wisconsin - https://wicci.wisc.edu/wisconsin-climate-trends-and-projections/
This week, we dive deep into two news stories that flew under the public’s radar. In the summer of 2020, individuals all over the country started receiving random packages of unsolicited and unidentified seeds. In the spring of 2021, pet stores around the country found that the moss balls on their shelves carried a notorious aquatic hitchhiker. On this episode, we talk to some of the people who devoted months of their lives to dealing with these first-of-their-kind international crises.
Special thanks to our guests Christopher Deegan, Wesley Daniels, Amy Kretlow and Amy McGovern.
Report a nonindigenous aquatic species - https://nas.er.usgs.gov/SightingReport.aspx
Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database - USGS - https://nas.er.usgs.gov/queries/default.aspx
Destroy! Don’t dump! - Zebra Mussel Disposal - https://www.fws.gov/fisheries/ANS/zebra-mussel-disposal.html
Hungry pests - Leave hungry pests behind - https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/resources/pests-diseases/hungry-pests/hungrypests
Zebra mussels - https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/our-work/focus-areas/ais/invasive-species/invasive-species-fact-sheets/mollusks/zebra-mussels/
Quagga mussels - https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/our-work/focus-areas/ais/invasive-species/invasive-species-fact-sheets/mollusks/quagga-mussel/
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