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Less than 400 Left: How Media Coverage Shapes the Fate of North Atlantic Right Whales

Less than 400 Left: How Media Coverage Shapes the Fate of North Atlantic Right Whales

Update: 2025-08-22
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Less than 400 left — that’s how many North Atlantic right whales remain in the world. These critically endangered whales are at the center of an urgent conservation story, but how the media communicates about them plays a powerful role in shaping public awareness and action. In this episode of How to Protect the Ocean, Andrew Lewin sits down with Dr. Marcus Reamer, a new PhD graduate in science communication, to explore how newspapers and digital outlets covered right whale crises over the past decade.

Science communication emerges as a critical conservation tool, with Dr. Reamer sharing insights from his research on major publications like the New York Times, Washington Post, and LA Times. Together, they unpack why media coverage spikes during crises but fades when attention shifts elsewhere, and what this means for endangered species storytelling.

Whale conservation depends not only on data and science but also on the narratives shared with the public. This conversation highlights how media framing can help or hinder conservation literacy, and how improved communication can increase support for saving one of the world’s rarest whales.

Link to article: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2515-7620/adeeec

 

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Less than 400 Left: How Media Coverage Shapes the Fate of North Atlantic Right Whales

Less than 400 Left: How Media Coverage Shapes the Fate of North Atlantic Right Whales

Andrew Lewin - Marine Biologist & Science Communicator