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A weekly environmental news roundup produced in Arcata, California by Tom Wheeler (Environmental Protection Information Center), Caroline Griffith (Northcoast Environmental Center), Alicia Hamann (Friends of the Eel River), Jen Kalt (Humboldt Waterkeeper) and Colin Fiske (Coalition for Responsible Transportation Priorities). 

EcoNews Report The Green Gang

    • Nachrichten

A weekly environmental news roundup produced in Arcata, California by Tom Wheeler (Environmental Protection Information Center), Caroline Griffith (Northcoast Environmental Center), Alicia Hamann (Friends of the Eel River), Jen Kalt (Humboldt Waterkeeper) and Colin Fiske (Coalition for Responsible Transportation Priorities). 

    Toxic Soup in the Smith River

    Toxic Soup in the Smith River

    The Smith River needs your help. Agricultural operations along the estuary are polluting the river with high levels of pesticides. This pesticide pollution is impacting coho salmon, tidewater goby and other wildlife that rely on the river, as well as the human residents that live amongst the pollution.
    Greg King, executive director of the Siskiyou Land Conservancy, joins the show to discuss his organization’s new report detailing the 40 year history of pesticide pollution in the river and what needs to be done to restore it.
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    • 29 Min.
    Coping with Climate Anxiety

    Coping with Climate Anxiety

    “One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds.” - Aldo Leopold

    Do you also have a gnawing, seemingly ever-present hum in the back of your head—an intrusive thought about the immensity of the climate crisis and your own miniscule ability to do anything about it? If so, you are not alone. Some 83% of the United States thinks that climate change poses a "serious and imminent threat to the planet" and "59% of youth and young adults said they were very or extremely worried about climate change."
    Doomerism is not the only option. Would you like to reduce your own eco-anxiety? This show is for you. Join Chelsea Pulliam, EcoSomatic Coach at Somatic Earth, for a discussion about how you can cultivate resilience. 


    Want to hear more? Check our interview with Sarah Jaquette Ray, author of A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety.


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    • 28 Min.
    How Do Fish Get Counted, and Why Does Genetic Diversity Matter?

    How Do Fish Get Counted, and Why Does Genetic Diversity Matter?

    This week on the EcoNews Report, we discuss how fish are monitored and counted. Our host Alicia Hamann from Friends of the Eel River is joined by Dave Kajtaniak from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and Samantha Kannry from TRIB Research. Tune in to learn about the hopeful returns salmon returns on the Eel and why preserving genetic diversity is so important to giving species the adaptability they need to survive our changing climate.
    Click here to learn more about TRIB Research.



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    • 29 Min.
    Can We Clean Up Humboldt Bay Before the Sea Rises?

    Can We Clean Up Humboldt Bay Before the Sea Rises?

    The industrial legacy of the 20th Century left many contaminated sites around Humboldt Bay. Our second special episode on communities at risk from sea level rise features local residents talking about several of the most vulnerable sites, including Tuluwat Island, Butcher Slough in Arcata, and the nuclear waste storage site above King Salmon. Many thanks to Hilanea Wilkinson, Adam Canter, Jerry Rohde, Nate Faith, and to Jessie Eden, who produced this episode with funding provided by the California Coastal Commission Whale Tail Grant Program.   
    For more info:
    The 44 Feet Project Cal Poly Humboldt Sea Level Rise InstituteHumboldt Bay Shoreline, North Eureka to South Arcata: A History of Cultural Influences - Jerry RohdeHumboldt Bay King Tide Photo Project - Humboldt Waterkeeper


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    • 27 Min.
    You Loved the Movie. Now See Humboldt's Dunes!

    You Loved the Movie. Now See Humboldt's Dunes!

    Spice up your life by checking out the spectacular dunes of Humboldt County! Just like the shifting sands of Arrakis in the iconic Dune series, these sandy landscapes are home to unique and fragile ecosystems, adapted over millennia, which were once at threat from exploitation. And who are the Fremen that protect our dunes from OHVs, invasive species, and other threats? Meet Suzie Fortner, the new executive director of Friends of the Dunes. Suzie and outgoing executive director Mike Cipra join the show to discuss the restoration and education work of the Friends and why our Dunes are worth fighting for!
    Need some gear? Check out the annual Get Outside Gear Sale on April 6 (open for members starting at 11am-noon and the general public 12-6pm). Or donate your own used gear! *No Stillsuits, used helmets, weapons, skis, snowboards, moldy/rusty items, and other similar items.
    Want more? Meet the original Muad'Dib of the dunes, Hortense Lanphere.
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    • 29 Min.
    Dam Removal is Sometimes Messy (But Worth It)

    Dam Removal is Sometimes Messy (But Worth It)

    Klamath River dam removal is underway, with drawdown of the three largest reservoirs occurring now and physical removal of these dam structures scheduled for this summer. The dams have impacted the river for over a hundred years and dam removal has its own environmental impacts. While fish biologists and water quality scientists are confident that the long-term benefits will outweigh the short-term impacts, a loud group of dam removal antagonists have glommed onto the ‘messy’ part of this massive ecosystem restoration project — temporary increases in suspended sediment and associated impacts to water quality and the recent mortality event of hatchery juvenile salmon— to continue their fight against dam removal.
    Luckily, Toz Soto, Senior Fisheries Biologist with the Karuk Tribe, and Dr. Maia Singer, Senior Scientist at Stillwater Sciences, join the show to help sort fact from fiction.
    For more information about Klamath Dam removal, check out:
    Lower Klamath Project – Final Environmental Impact Report (EIR) | California State Water Resources Control Board
    Klamath Dam Removal Overview Report for the Secretary of the Interior an Assessment of Science and Technical Information, Version 1.1, March 2013 | FWS.gov
    Klamath Dam Removal Studies | U.S. Geological Survey (usgs.gov)
    Klamath River Renewal (klamathrenewal.org)
    Klamath Basin Monitoring Program
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    • 29 Min.

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