Along 1,600 miles of the Eastern Seaboard, from Maine to Florida, sea level rise, subsidence, and more potent storms are challenging the National Park Service to figure out how best to protect wildlife and their habitats, as well as historic structures, archaeological sites, modern infrastructure, landscapes, and, of course, visitors.
In the coming months, the National Parks Traveler will be examining impacts tied to climate change and how the National Park Service is responding to them. We’ll bring you the concerns of residents and communities that are left with the damage from hurricanes and the loss of tax revenues from tourism and trace the strain these events have on the Park Service staff and budget.
We’ll also talk to experts about how natural landscapes, such as barrier reefs and salt marshes, and wildlife are being impacted. We’re going to have one of those conversations today with two experts from The Nature Conservancy: Dr. Alison Branco, TNC’s Climate Adaptation Director, and Dr. Nicole Maher, the organization’s Senior Coastal Scientist.
0:02 National Parks Traveler introduction
0:12 Episode Intro with Kurt Repanshek
1:05 Beyond the Reef - Tim Heintz & Grant Geissman - Seascapes: A Musical Journey
1:28 Smokies Life
1:50 Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation
2:13 Friends of Acadia
2:39 NPT Promo
3:00 Episode 283 - Coastal Climate Change Impacts
49:00 Kenai Fjords - Various Artists - The Spirit of Alaska
49:31 Episode Closing
49:52 Orange Tree Productions
50:25 Splitbeard Productions
50:36 National Parks Traveler footer
- By Jess Repanshek - August 15th, 2024 4:51pm







