National Parks Traveler Episode 89: Beluga Whales And The Pebble Mine

National park podcasts, best national park podcasts, beluga whales, Lake Clark National Park

We are not alone in this world. We share it, obviously, with wildlife and marine life, and the vegetation that grows on land and in the oceans. How we treat those landscapes can have detrimental impacts to those other life forms. The push to sink a sprawling open-pit copper and molybdenum mine near Lake Clark National Park and Preserve and Bristol Bay in Alaska has raised more than a few fears of how it might impact the lands and waters in that region. 

While much has been said about how the mine might impact Bristol Bay’s rich salmon fisheries, what about beluga whales? What is behind the rapid decline of beluga whales in Alaska’s Cook Inlet, a 180-mile-long body of water that runs southwest from Anchorage along a number of national parks, national wildlife refuges and wilderness areas to the Gulf of Alaska?   

Is it climate change, environmental stressors, or a combination of both? And how does their health compare to beluga populations in other Alaskan waters? These are questions a beluga specialist team from Mystic Aquarium in Connecticut plans to tackle as it embarks on a study to see what’s causing the lack of recovery in this critically endangered mammal.   

National Parks Traveler’s Lynn Riddick touched base with Doctor Tracy Romano from Mystic Aquarium to get a general picture of beluga whales and what they’re up against in their struggle for survival in Alaska’s Cook Inlet. 

:02 National Parks Traveler introduction
:12 Episode introduction with Kurt Repanshek
2:18 Wonder Lake - Various Artists - The Spirit of Alaska
2:30 Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation promotion
2:53 Wild Tribute promotion
3:18 North Cascades Institute promotion
3:43 Lynn Riddick discusses the endangered beluga whales of Cook Inlet in Alaska with Dr. Tracy Romano.
35:51 Whispering Winds - Grant Geissman - Sounds of the Caribbean
36:21 National Parks Traveler promotion
36:35 Friends of Acadia promotion
37:02 Washington’s National Park Fund promotion
37:35 Grand Teton National Park Foundation promotion
38:06 Episode Closing
38:35 Orange Tree Productions promotion
39:10 Splitbeard Productions
39:21 National Parks Traveler footer

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National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 378 | Wilderness Lost

Across the United States, from Alaska to Puerto Rico, there are about 112 million acres of officially designated wilderness. That amounts to about 5 percent of the country’s land mass. It might appear to be even smaller when you consider that more than half of those 112 million acres protected as wilderness are in Alaska.

June 21st, 2026 Read More

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 377 | Don't Erase History So Fast

It was a little more than a year ago when Interior Secretary Doug Burgum asked the public to help him identify interpretive materials in the National Park System that disparaged Americans past or living or which contained content that detracts from viewpoints of scenic grandeur.

Well, it appears that the public didn’t share his concerns.

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National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 376 | ESA's Future

Since this past December here at the Traveler we’ve been bringing you a series of stories on the Endangered Species Act and the threatened and endangered species it’s intended to keep from going extinct.

For me, it’s been an eye-opening series because of what our editors and writers have learned about threatened and endangered species — from birds to trees and even to grasses — and the work being done to help them recover. It’s certainly not an easy task, and one that often takes decades before you can see progress.

May 31st, 2026 Read More

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 375 | Rethinking Public Lands Stewardship

Public lands stewardship has most definitely changed under the second presidential administration of Donald Trump. Land-management agencies such as the National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, and Bureau of Land Management have lost thousands of employees, and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum is on a mission to turn the country’s public lands into a cash cow of sorts.

May 24th, 2026 Read More

National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 374 | Cook Inlet's Beluga Whales

A fast-track proposal to develop a gold mine near Alaska’s Cook Inlet and Lake Clark National Park and Preserve is alarming scientists, environmental groups and local communities because of the devastating effects it is expected to have on the region’s critically endangered beluga whales.

May 17th, 2026 Read More

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