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Big Sky Country
Bush Heritage Australia
21 episodes
1 week ago
Send us a text From plankton to humpbacks, ocean life is riding massive waves of change – including ocean warming, rising sea levels, acidification and algal blooms. In the Timor Sea off the Kimberley Coast and over to Agnes Water in Queensland, marine biologists and Wunambal Gaambera Rangers are mapping turtles tracks, monitoring threats to their nests and protecting tiny hatchlings. Along the humpback highway, wildlife scientist Vanessa Pirotta shares how whales are fertilising...
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Natural Sciences
Science
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All content for Big Sky Country is the property of Bush Heritage Australia and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Send us a text From plankton to humpbacks, ocean life is riding massive waves of change – including ocean warming, rising sea levels, acidification and algal blooms. In the Timor Sea off the Kimberley Coast and over to Agnes Water in Queensland, marine biologists and Wunambal Gaambera Rangers are mapping turtles tracks, monitoring threats to their nests and protecting tiny hatchlings. Along the humpback highway, wildlife scientist Vanessa Pirotta shares how whales are fertilising...
Show more...
Natural Sciences
Science
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The secret life of phascogales
Big Sky Country
19 minutes
3 years ago
The secret life of phascogales
Climb up the tree. Open the nest box. And look inside the lives of Red-tailed Phascogales. These small arboreal marsupials - with their big ears, big eyes and fluffy red tails - are just as loveable as koalas and kangaroos, but with a few big differences. They can fit in the palm of your hand. They have death-inducing mating habits. And, while they were once widespread across the southern half of Australia, they are now mostly restricted to the wheatbelt region of Western Australia. &nb...
Big Sky Country
Send us a text From plankton to humpbacks, ocean life is riding massive waves of change – including ocean warming, rising sea levels, acidification and algal blooms. In the Timor Sea off the Kimberley Coast and over to Agnes Water in Queensland, marine biologists and Wunambal Gaambera Rangers are mapping turtles tracks, monitoring threats to their nests and protecting tiny hatchlings. Along the humpback highway, wildlife scientist Vanessa Pirotta shares how whales are fertilising...