Jake Dane, Giovanni Marrero-Baez, Adam Hendley, Holly Riley, and Heath Fowler make up the group known as Wolf and Witness. They perform their song “From the Atmosphere” in the WFSU television studios
It's made up of 55,000 acres of private land, but in 300 years there is a plan is for it to be an old (almost) growth forest of longleaf pines. We explore the work that has already been done...
The Florida Wildlife Conservation Commission and its partners work to protect the frosted flatwoods salamander, a fire dependent animal in serious decline. Once common in wetlands throughout the American southeast, it has been reduced to a handful of viable...
Mundi’s Attapulgus Adventure It’s hard to imagine the world’s largest land animal acting like a little puppy, but that's exactly how Mundi the elephant behaved when she began to settle into her new home in Attapulgus, Georgia. Flopping her ears...
We learn how a Geographical Information System (or GIS) is being used to help share the history of Tallahassee and Leon County with our community.
Two releases of striped newts into ephemeral wetlands in the Apalachicola National Forest show how this is an amphibian forged by fire. These ephemeral wetlands drain and fill with the underlying aquifer. The amphibians that live within...
We go deeper into striped newt repatriation and the ecology of the Munson Sandhills on the WFSU Ecology Blog.
Register for this year’s WFSU Splash and Bubbles Summer Challenge sponsored by Alert Today Florida. Have fun with an online, offline, interactive, hands-on, creative summer scavenger hunt! Finish the challenges and then share your journey with WFSU so you’ll...
We join UF/ IFAS Leon County Extension agent Mark Tancig as he digs holes around Tallahassee. We're looking at the native soils of Tallahassee, and how they affect plant growth in our yards. An ancient coastline divides the Red...
After the tide swallows the sand bar off of Bald Point, we walk over to the oyster reefs. A few foraging birds poke the sprinkling of oysters still above water; we end up counting seven oystercatchers. Susan Cerulean notices...

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