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Project Upland Podcast

Podcast von Project Upland Media Group

Englisch

Wissen​schaft & Techno​logie

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Project Upland presents the Project Upland Podcast, a cinematic and science-based production that delivers on the independent storytelling you have come to love. Cohosts AJ DeRosa and Gabby Zaldumbide learn from researchers, biologists, and subject matter experts about birds, nature, conservation, dogs, and more. This podcast is a glimpse into the minds of the curious, obsessive, and hard-working folks who work at Project Upland and an exploration of all the things we find that we can't always include in print.Join us as we travel into the deepest, most obscure, and nerdiest realms of the uplands. After all, these are your stories.

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12 Folgen

Episode The Public Trust Doctrine - The Civics of Conservation Cover

The Public Trust Doctrine - The Civics of Conservation

How the Public Trust Doctrine Built the Uniquely American Idea of Publicly Owned Wildlife and Wildlife Management In this episode, AJ and Gabby explore the origins of the Public Trust Doctrine with Leon Szeptycki and examine how a series of legal and political turning points helped shape wildlife conservation in the United States. From Roman law and medieval England to landmark Supreme Court cases and the conservation movement of the Progressive Era, they trace how the idea of wildlife as a shared public resource became embedded in American law and culture. AJ and Gabby discuss how Europe’s long history of private hunting rights tied wildlife access to land ownership, and why the United States ultimately took a different path—one in which wildlife is collectively owned by the people rather than by landowners or the state itself. They break down several pivotal Supreme Court cases, including Martin v. Waddell, Illinois Central Railroad v. Illinois, Geer v. Connecticut, and Hughes v. Oklahoma, explaining how each helped define the relationship between public ownership, state authority, and wildlife management. Along the way, they explore how these decisions laid the groundwork for modern fish and wildlife agencies and the broader North American Model of Conservation. This episode also examines modern tensions surrounding public lands, private landowner tag allocations, and the ongoing debate over who truly benefits from wildlife management today. Throughout the episode, AJ and Gabby argue that understanding the civic and legal foundations of conservation is essential for hunters hoping to engage meaningfully in the future of public lands, wildlife policy, and access in North America. Listen to past episodes here: Project Upland Podcast [https://projectupland.com/category/project-upland-listen/project-upland-podcast/] If you want to support independent journalism, check out the Project Upland Podcast Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]

11. Mai 2026 - 28 min
Episode Rare Itinerant Breeders: How Researchers Discovered the Woodcock’s Unique Breeding Strategy Cover

Rare Itinerant Breeders: How Researchers Discovered the Woodcock’s Unique Breeding Strategy

GPS tracking reveals American woodcock re-nesting movements across the Atlantic Flyway In this episode, AJ and Gabby talk with Colby Slezak, a recent PhD graduate from the University of Rhode Island, about a surprising breakthrough in American woodcock ecology: evidence that female woodcock can be itinerant breeders. Colby explains how new GPS tracking technology, combined with on-the-ground nest checks through the Eastern Woodcock Migration Research Cooperative, helped confirm a behavior that had long been suspected but rarely documented. When nests fail, some female woodcock will travel long distances and attempt to nest again elsewhere, sometimes multiple times in a single spring. We unpack why woodcock have such an extended breeding season, what low nest success looks like on the ground, and how constraints like GPS tag size and battery life shape what researchers can learn about breeding ecology. Colby also reflects on the moment he and his colleagues realized their data supported this long-standing theory, an unexpected discovery that reshaped how researchers understand woodcock breeding behavior. The conversation then shifts to Colby’s brief time with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and what federal workforce reductions and buyouts may mean for conservation capacity, long-term partnerships, and the institutional knowledge behind migratory bird research. To learn more about the Eastern Woodcock Migration Research Cooperative, visit woodcockmigration.org [https://www.woodcockmigration.org/]. Listen to past episodes here: Project Upland Podcast [https://projectupland.com/category/project-upland-listen/project-upland-podcast/] If you want to support independent journalism, check out the Project Upland Podcast Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]

27. Apr. 2026 - 27 min
Episode How White-Winged Doves Are Outsmarting Extinction Cover

How White-Winged Doves Are Outsmarting Extinction

In Texas [https://projectupland.com/rules-regulations-and-seasons/bird-hunting-in-texas/] and Arizona [https://projectupland.com/rules-regulations-and-seasons/bird-hunting-arizona/], white-winged doves [https://projectupland.com/dove-hunting/white-winged-dove-zenaida-asiatica-bird-profile/] are culturally significant and a part of each state’s hunting heritage. Biologists are actively studying these unique migratory birds; in fact, the first research project to ever outfit white-winged doves with GPS transmitters is currently underway in Texas. In this episode, AJ and Gabby talk to Owen Fitzsimmons [https://www.ckwri.tamuk.edu/about/owen-n-fitzsimmons-ms], the webless migratory game bird program leader for Texas Parks and Wildlife. Owen, alongside Dr. Jennifer Smith of the Caesar Kleburg Wildlife Research Institute [https://www.ckwri.tamuk.edu/about/jennifer-smith-phd] at Texas A&M University Kingsville, to learn more about the urban ecology, behaviors, and life history of white wings.  Tune in to learn how white-winged doves are expanding their range, interacting with mourning doves [https://projectupland.com/dove-hunting/mourning-dove-zenaida-macroura-bird-profile/], and defining what it means for wildlife to thrive alongside people. Listen to past episodes here: Project Upland Podcast [https://projectupland.com/category/project-upland-listen/project-upland-podcast/] If you want to support independent journalism, check out the Project Upland Podcast Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]

27. Jan. 2026 - 33 min
Episode The Birds Aren’t Alright Cover

The Birds Aren’t Alright

In the Project Upland Podcast [https://projectupland.com/project-upland-podcast/] episode “The Birds Aren’t Alright,” hosts Gabby Zaldumbide and A.J. DeRosa speak with Dr. Michael Brasher, senior waterfowl scientist at Ducks Unlimited [https://www.ducks.org/] and co-chair of the State of the Birds Report [https://www.stateofthebirds.org/2025/] Science Committee, to uncover what the latest data reveal about bird population trends—and what is at stake if federal funding for avian research disappears. Bird species have been monitored for more than a century, but if federal funding for avian research is lost, what else will vanish with it? The conversation traces the roots of modern bird monitoring back to the first Christmas Bird Count in 1900 and explains how decades of citizen science, state surveys, and federal efforts now feed into one of the most important bird conservation reports of our time. Dr. Brasher shares how long-term data collection reveals population changes in ducks, seabirds, upland game birds, and more, underscoring that the greatest driver of decline is widespread habitat loss. The discussion highlights the concept of “tipping point species”—birds that have lost more than 50 percent of their population over the last 50 years, including iconic game birds such as the greater sage-grouse [https://projectupland.com/grouse-species/sage-grouse/greater-sage-grouse-centrocercus-urophasianus-bird-profile/] and the lesser prairie-chicken [https://projectupland.com/grouse-species/prairie-chicken/lesser-prairie-chicken/]. The hosts emphasize both the hope and urgency contained in the report: citizen science tools like eBird empower everyday birders to contribute critical data, while conservation policies such as the Duck Stamp Program have proven their value in reversing declines. Yet the episode also warns of looming threats, including deep funding cuts to federal conservation programs and the risk of losing the scientific foundation for hunting regulations. Ultimately, the conversation serves as a call to action for hunters, birders, and citizens alike to participate in monitoring, advocacy, and habitat conservation to ensure the future of North America’s birds. Listen to past episodes here: Project Upland Podcast [https://projectupland.com/category/project-upland-listen/project-upland-podcast/] If you want to support independent journalism, check out the Project Upland Podcast Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]

9. Sept. 2025 - 39 min
Episode Urgent: The Senate Public Lands Sale - A Breakdown Cover

Urgent: The Senate Public Lands Sale - A Breakdown

In this episode, AJ and Gabby take a break from their regular programming to discuss the sale of public lands as part of the federal budget reconciliation bill.  On June 11, 2025, the Energy and Natural Resources Committee Hearing to Examine the President’s Budget Request for the Department of the Interior for Fiscal Year 2026 took place. In it, senators discuss “The “Mandatory Disposal of Bureau of Land Management Land And National Forest System Land for Housing,” which would require the sale of 2-3 million acres of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land and U.S. Forest Service (USFS) land within a five year period. BLM and USFS land is public land—YOUR land. Why are senators trying to include the sale of our land as part of the budget reconciliation bill? Some theorize that it’s part of a systematic, long-term approach to shift public lands towards private control. The current reconciliation effort isn’t an isolated policy—it’s the culmination of decades of ideological moves. If you care about the American public retaining access to the land we collectively own, now is the time to speak up. Contact your senators via social media, phone, email, or snail mail and tell them what you think. Three million acres of your lands are on the line. Listen to past episodes here: Project Upland Podcast [https://projectupland.com/category/project-upland-listen/project-upland-podcast/] If you want to support independent journalism, check out the Project Upland Podcast Patreon [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]. Links * Watch the Senate hearing here [https://www.energy.senate.gov/hearings/2025/6/full-committee-hearing-to]. * Read “More Details Emerge Around the Public Land Sale Bill — and It’s Worse Than You Think” by Andrew McKean here [https://www.outdoorlife.com/conservation/public-land-sell-off-senate/].   * This ArcGIS map [https://www.arcgis.com/apps/instant/basic/index.html?appid=821970f0212d46d7aa854718aac42310] visualizes the 250+ million acres of public lands eligible for sale in the Senate budget reconciliation package. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/ProjectUpland]

19. Juni 2025 - 34 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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