Katie Byers

Wild Tomorrow Podcast

Science EN ↓ 7 episodios

Wildlife advocate and conservation troublemaker. I write the truths insiders won’t say: where donations go, which rescues harm, why viral videos lie. thicketandbone.substack.com

Autor

Katie Byers

Categoría

Science

Web del podcast

thicketandbone.substack.com

Último episodio

4 de jun. de 2026

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Episodios

When Bears Show Up Where They Shouldn’t: What Simultaneous Sightings Across Six States Actually Tell Us 04.06.2026

I’ve spent enough time tracking wildlife stories to know when something shifts from coincidence to pattern. This week, black bears appeared in residential areas across Minnesota, Massachusetts, Ohio, Colorado, Pennsylvania, and New York. Not one or two isolated incidents. Simultaneous reports across regions that don’t typically share ecological conditions. The official explanation landed quickly:...

What 31 Dead Sloths Reveal About Conservation Theater 07.05.2026

Show Notes: What 31 Dead Sloths Reveal About Conservation Theater Support organizations doing the actual work: The Sloth Conservation Foundation (SloCo) Field-based sloth research and habitat protection in Costa Rica. No public interaction, no sanctuary tourism. Just science and conservation on the ground. slothconservation.org/donate The Sloth Institute Sloth rehabilitation and release in Costa R...

You Moved to the Country. The Country Was Already Occupied. 21.04.2026

There is a particular kind of wildlife conflict story that wildlife rehabilitators, rural landowners, and conservation professionals have started to recognize on sight. It goes like this: someone moves to a rural area, discovers that rural areas contain wildlife, and then spends considerable energy trying to make the wildlife go somewhere else. The raccoons were here first. So were the possums, th...

The Raccoon Relocation Problem: Why "Catch and Release" Is Not What You Think It Is 21.04.2026

Every spring, social media fills up with well-meaning posts from people who have discovered that raccoons are eating their cat food, raiding their garden, or throwing a block party on their back porch. The solution, many of them announce with confidence, is simple: trap them and relocate them somewhere they can live their best raccoon life. It sounds kind. It is not kind. And in Texas, it is also...

What to Do When You Find a Wild Animal 15.04.2026

Every spring and summer, my phone fills up with the same call. Someone has found something. A bird on the ground, a baby squirrel in the yard, a turtle in the road. They are panicked and well-meaning and standing there not knowing what to do next. That first instinct of reaching out is exactly right. It’s the next five minutes that determine whether the animal makes it. This week’s episode of Wild...

Wild Wins, March 2026 (Podcast): A Sturgeon, Four Rhinos, and $3.8 Billion 07.04.2026

Wild Wins is now a podcast. Same coverage, same voice, new format. Each month, we break down the biggest conservation victories in one episode: the funding, the court rulings, the species coming back, and the tech making it possible. March 2026 gave us a lot to work with. Canada’s $3.8 billion nature commitment. The ESA restored by a federal court. Forty species gaining international protection. R...

The Zoo Question, episode 1 10.03.2026

Hi, I'm Katie Byers, and this is The Zoo Question, a series from Wild Tomorrow about what really happens behind the conservation story zoos like to tell. In this first episode, we're talking about something I call the zoo industrial complex: how institutions that say they exist to savewildlife have become mostly about ticket sales, branding, and balance sheets. If you've ever walked into a zoo and...

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