Ocean, People, Planet: A Wildlife Refuge On The Brink
Episode 115
Stat: 2.1 feet—Scientists have forecast an increase of as much as 2.1 feet in the Chesapeake Bay by 2050.
Story: In this episode, we travel to Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge on the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, where the refuge is losing ground to climate change and rising sea levels. Through interviews with experts—including Joseph Gordon, project director for Pew’s work on conserving marine life in the U.S.; Marcia Pradines Long, manager of Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge; Kristin Thomasgard, program director with the Department of Defense; Julie M. Schablitsky, chief archaeologist at the Maryland Department of Transportation; and Kate Larson, a historian and author—we explore the threats facing this refuge because of the changing climate, and the path ahead for its environmental, cultural, and economic future.
Related resources:
How the Military is Working With Communities to Tackle Climate Change
Carbon Captured by Coastal and Ocean Habitats Can Advance States’ Climate Goals
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Places
People

Author and Historian

Project Leader
Chesapeake Marshlands National Wildlife Refuge Complex

Chief Archaeologist
Maryland Department of Transportation

Program Director
Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration Program, U.S. Department of Defense
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There is only one ocean, essential to the life of everyone on Earth—and it faces perils like never before
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