Episode 2: Right under our noses?

(FT “President” Tykee James)

Wildlife can be big, and wildlife can be small. In either case it can be right under our noses without our knowing it. In Episode 2, we turn to some of the smaller critters we don’t know are living all around us.

Tony and Billy teamed up with guest host Tykee James, of Wild West Philly, who tells us how to tell a dogwood from the other trees of the forest.

We talk with Isa Betancourt, whose insect sampling project with the Academy of Natural Sciences featured a historic fountain in Center City Philadelphia. Here’s a photo of her badass cuckoo wasp.

Betancourt CuckooWasp Profile

We joined Billy on an urban forest expedition to see Philadelphia’s other Rocky, the common but secretive southern flying squirrel.

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Last we get to the Kirtland’s snake, nearly-endangered, but oddly common in Midwestern Cities. It hasn’t been seen in 50 years in Pennsylvania. Will 2015 be the year that citizen scientists find it in Pittsburgh? We talk with Brandon Ruhe of the Pennsylvania Amphibian and Reptile Survey, and Ohio herper extraordinaire Peter Kleinhenz.

https://flic.kr/p/e89DYH

(photo Peter Kleinhenz)

Check out these Grid articles for more on Wild West Philly, Temple University’s bird-strike prevention work, and the Swann Fountain Insect Survey.

Episode 3*: Timbers on a Boston Island

(FT Michael McGraw and Matthew Halley)

In this episode Billy talks to one of his literary idols, Thomas Palmer, about Palmer’s classic Landscape with Reptile: Rattlesnakes in an Urban World, and to rattler researcher Anne Stengle about the current state of the rattlers of the Blue Hills.

Cover shot of Landscape with Repile

The hosting crew (Billy and Tony, Matthew Halley, and Mike McGraw) had a great time talking/arguing about urban rattlers, island effects, and even facultive parthenogenesis.

*Although in Episode 2 we said the next episode would be about the Pier 53 Skinks, we decided to make that recording a special episode at the end of this season. Stay tuned for that extended, extra-loose edition.

Episode 1: Bangkok Pythons and Gotham Whales

Q: How do huge animals get right up close to millions of people who don’t even know they’re there?

A: Water.

Whales are actually in it while reticulated pythons use the canals and ditches that drain Southeast Asian cities to access the local rats. We speak to Michael Hakim of Bangkok Herps and Paul Sieswerda of Gotham Whale for the very first episode of the Urban Wildlife Cast.