How to Save It

Whitley Fund for Nature

Extraordinary people are doing astonishing work to save nature around the world and clocking up big wins for the rarest of species and most fragile ecosystems. Join wildlife broadcaster Kate Humble and Edward Whitley for Season 2 as they explore unexpected solutions from award-winning conservationists saving wildlife species from Javan gibbons to jaguars in Brazil and learn how even a small stream frog in remote Patagonia was able to find its biggest champion. Backed by Sir David Attenborough, and founded by Edward Whitley, the Whitley Fund for Nature is a London-based environmental NGO that accelerates the work of grassroots conservationists. Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations: Emily Faccini How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ and https://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. Connecting Corridors for Colombia's Brown Spider Monkeys

    JAN 14

    Connecting Corridors for Colombia's Brown Spider Monkeys

    The brown spider monkey and its "orchestral" Magdalena River Valley habitat in Colombia have been the focus of Dr Andrés Link's work for 20+ years. Birds, not monkeys were his original plan, he tells Kate and Edward, but the monkey's graceful movement and complex social behaviour drew him to the species whose forest habitat had become fragmented, cleared for ranching and palm oil. Reconnecting it is crucial for survival and Andrés and his team at the NGO he founded Fundación Proyecto Primates are not only winning support from local landowners, they're helping them to plant trees. It’s a project Andrés says has the potential to be replicated across Colombia, home to almost 10 percent of the world's biodiversity.   How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup Find out more and watch Andrés film here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Link Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ and https://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature   For more on reconnecting habitat for tree-dwelling mammals, listen to our episode with Fernanda Abra who is building low-cost canopy bridges in the Amazon https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Abra    Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations: Emily Faccini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    12 min
  2. Java's Singing, Swinging Gibbons

    JAN 14

    Java's Singing, Swinging Gibbons

    It’s a happy accident for the Javan gibbon that Rahayu Oktaviani could not find funding to study orangutans and switched to gibbons for purely practical reasons. She was hooked once she heard “the most beautiful song” of her life in the forest and is working with her team at KIARA, the NGO she founded, to make sure that it doesn’t disappear. Less than 10 percent of forests remain in Java, one of the most densely populated islands on earth. Rahayu, known as Ayu, is part of a new generation of conservationists inspired by Sir David Attenborough as well as primatologists Jane Goodall, Dian Fossey and Birute Galdikas. She tells Kate and Edward that she wants to raise awareness of the Javan gibbon in the same way the legendary women helped chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans to win hearts and minds around the world.     How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup    Find out more and watch Ayu’s film https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Oktaviani    Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ and https://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature   For more on primates, listen to our episode with Kuenzang Dorji in Bhutan who works with Gee’s Golden Langur monkeys https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Dorji    Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations by Emily Faccini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    11 min
  3. Argentina's El Rincón Stream Frog Finds its Biggest Champion

    2025-12-31

    Argentina's El Rincón Stream Frog Finds its Biggest Champion

    Argentina’s Somuncura Plateau in the Patagonian steppe resembles a vast rocky lunar landscape. It’s where a volcanic stream allowed for the evolution of a tiny amphibian, the El Rincón stream frog which has found its biggest champion in Dr Federico Kacoliris. "Unlike most people, I was drawn to those often seen as ugly or feared – frogs, snakes, lizards, but also many insects. I like them. I don’t know why..." he tells Kate and Edward. The frog was one of the most endangered amphibians in the world. In this episode, Federico explains to Kate and Edward how his team at his NGO Fundación Somuncura brought the frog back from the brink of extinction through captive breeding and finding solutions for people living in this remote landscape whose livestock were a threat. Federico is now scaling up and creating a nature reserve to share his enthusiasm for the extreme landscape that he loves with tourism on the agenda to see his favourite frog and other fauna....     How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup    Find out more and watch Federico’s short film https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Kacoliris Photo credit: Hernán Povedano   Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ and https://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature   For more on the discovery of new species, listen to our episode with Leroy Ignacio in Guyana https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Ignacio    Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations by Emily Faccini Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    11 min
  4. Walking with World's Smallest Elephants in Malaysian Borneo

    2025-12-17

    Walking with World's Smallest Elephants in Malaysian Borneo

    The Lower Kinabatangan in Malaysian Borneo is a tropical mix of lush forests, mangroves and oxbow lakes and home to the Bornean elephant, the world's smallest as well as roundest and cutest elephant, in the opinion of Dr Farina Othman. She and her team are building a protected corridor in partnership with oil palm plantations for the 250 elephants that remain locally. Ninety percent of their original habitat has been converted to oil palm, now the main source of income for local people who feel the elephant “belongs to the scientists, the NGOs, the government…" and not them, she tells Kate and Edward. Her nonprofit Seratu Aatai is helping build the skills to coexist with elephants and to "walk this journey with them,” Farina explains. Her plan is to put Kinabatangan on the map as a conservation model that can be replicated across other landscapes.    How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup    Find out more and watch Farina’s film https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Othman    Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ and https://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature   For more on the elephant’s closest relative, the manatee, listen to our episode with Dr Aristide Kamla from Cameroon https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Kamla    Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations by Emily Faccini Photo credit: Cede Prudente   Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    12 min
  5. The Jaguars of Iguaçu Just Wanna Be Jaguars

    2025-12-17

    The Jaguars of Iguaçu Just Wanna Be Jaguars

    "Shy, incredibly powerful, they are the biggest cat in America…." and jaguars are free to roam Iguaçu National Park in Brazil's Atlantic Forest, home to one of the world's biggest waterfalls and 185,000 hectares of lush and diverse sub-tropical broadleaf forest. They are also critically endangered locally.   "If you remove your fear glasses and you really look at them, you see that they just want to be jaguars," Dr Yara Barros tells Kate and Edward. "They don't want to kill you. They don't want to harm. They just want to hunt, raise their cubs, live in peace in the forest." Yara is executive coordinator of Project Jaguars of Iguaçu and arguably the species biggest champion. Her team is on call around the clock to ensure the survival of the apex predator, taking action to both defuse and prevent conflict with the inhabitants of the ten cities surrounding the park. Jaguar numbers more than doubled to 25 individuals in the park thanks to the work of Yara's small team to continuously monitor the species and raise awareness with local communities.   How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup    Find out more and see Yara’s short film  https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Barros   Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ andhttps://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature   For more on another of Brazil's iconic species, listen to our episode with Dr Pati Medici, a world leading expert on tapirs. https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Medici_Maldonado    Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations by Emily Faccini Photo credit: Emilio White Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    13 min
  6. Grey Crowned Cranes Make a Comeback in Rwanda

    2025-12-17

    Grey Crowned Cranes Make a Comeback in Rwanda

    Rwanda’s Grey Crowned Cranes were in trouble before a vet and former gorilla doctor stepped in with an innovative plan to save the leggy bird, known for its striking plumage and elaborate courtship dance. Dr Olivier Nsengimana tells Kate and Edward how his campaign won support from both Rwandans and the government, boosting the crane's fragile population by 1,000 individuals.    When you fall in love with nature, you can’t let your childhood superhero disappear, Olivier says. It's not just about saving the cranes, he says, but preserving the life-giving wetlands they inhabit for wildlife - and humanity. Olivier and his team at Rwanda Wildlife Conservation Association, the NGO he founded, are now leading an ambitious plan to reverse declines in the crane across East Africa, with partners in Tanzania, Uganda and Burundi.   How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup    Find out more and watch Olivier's short film https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Nsengimana    Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ and https://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature   For more on birds and preserving wetlands, listen to our episode on Dr Purnima Devi Barman whose pioneering work has saved the Greater Adjutant Stork in Assam. https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_Barman    Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations by Emily Faccini Photo credit: Lynn Von Gagen, Denver Zoo Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    13 min

About

Extraordinary people are doing astonishing work to save nature around the world and clocking up big wins for the rarest of species and most fragile ecosystems. Join wildlife broadcaster Kate Humble and Edward Whitley for Season 2 as they explore unexpected solutions from award-winning conservationists saving wildlife species from Javan gibbons to jaguars in Brazil and learn how even a small stream frog in remote Patagonia was able to find its biggest champion. Backed by Sir David Attenborough, and founded by Edward Whitley, the Whitley Fund for Nature is a London-based environmental NGO that accelerates the work of grassroots conservationists. Executive producer: Sarah Treanor Illustrations: Emily Faccini How to Save It highlights ingenious solutions from the world’s leading conservationists. To learn more about their work and to receive updates, sign up here https://bit.ly/WFN_Podcast_NewsletterSignup Follow us on https://www.instagram.com/whitleyawards/ and https://uk.linkedin.com/company/whitley-fund-for-nature Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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