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Conservation and Science

Conservation and Science

Tommy's Outdoors 252 Episodes Jun 20, 2026

Conservation and Science is a podcast that explores the complexities of nature and conservation, offering diverse perspectives on environmental stories. Host Tommy Serafinski interviews scientists, conservationists, farmers, hunters, and anglers, covering topics like biodiversity, rewilding, and human-wildlife conflict. The show aims to empower listeners with nuanced understanding and foster dialogue on ecological and social issues.

Episodes

230: Lessons from Nature with Simon Mustoe Jun 20, 2026 01:00:29 Why do we feel so hopeless about the future of the natural world? Is nature really collapsing everywhere we look or have we simply been told a one-sided story? And what if our lack of control over ecosystems turns out to be our greatest strength? In this episode I welcome back expert ecologist and author Simon Mustoe to talk about his new book, ‘How to Survive the Next 100 Years: Lessons from Natu
229: Biogeotherapy with Benoit Lambert Jun 2, 2026 01:07:22 What if the environmental movement has badly underestimated our ability to solve the climate crisis? Could renewable energy grow so fast that we are out of fossil fuels within a decade? And once emissions fall away, how do we deal with the carbon already in the atmosphere? In this episode I'm joined by Benoit Lambert, author of the book titled ‘Biogeotherapy: nature-based climate solutions, life a
228: Red Deer and Habitat Connectivity with Frank Zabel May 19, 2026 58:32 Why are red deer populations in Germany growing in number and antler size yet sitting in deep genetic trouble? What is the difference between census population size and effective population size, and why does it matter? And how can a satirical award for the worst-built wildlife crossing draw attention to the issue of habitat fragmentation? In this episode, I sit down with Frank Zabel, a wildlife b
227: Rewilding At the Edge with Peter Cairns May 5, 2026 01:05:48 What has shifted in rewilding over the past five years? Why do recovery of species like lynx, beavers and wolves trigger reactions that go far beyond the animals themselves? And what is the real obstacle to bringing lynx back to Scotland, the ecology, the bureaucracy, or something much harder to name? In this episode, our returning guest is Peter Cairns, co-founder and former Executive Director of
226: Building Community Resilience with Transition Kerry Apr 21, 2026 45:20 What makes farmers reluctant to talk about climate change, even though they see its effects first-hand? Can a trip to the Arctic change how you look at a small river in Kerry? And why might 'community first, environment second' be the right way round? These are some of the questions we explore in the second episode of the series following the Community Climate Adaptation and Resilience Programme i
225: How Many Wolves Is Enough with Joachim Mergeay Apr 15, 2026 01:10:05 How many wolves is enough? Is that even the right question to ask? And will the recent lowering of wolf protection status in the EU actually reduce the conflict between wolves and people? These are some of the questions we tackle in this episode. After the previous wolf episode generated a lot of feedback, including detailed emails from scientists, one of those scientists is our guest today. Joach
224: Conservation Labour with Anwesha Dutta and Nick Harvey Sky Mar 31, 2026 01:11:59 Working in conservation? Take the survey: CONLAB surveyWho are the people doing the actual work of conservation? How many of them are there and what are their working conditions? And whose labour remains invisible in the process? These are not questions that conservation science has spent much time on. Yet without understanding the people behind the work, we lack a complete picture of how conserva
SCOTLAND: The Big Picture | Podcasthon 2026 Mar 17, 2026 54:46 What does it take to bring wild nature back to a country that has forgotten what it looks like? Can rewilding truly benefit local communities and rural economies or does it come at their expense? And is Scotland really thirty years behind the rest of Europe when it comes to restoring its landscapes? This is a Podcasthon episode and this year I've chosen SCOTLAND: The Big Picture as my featured cha
223: Waters of Life with Tom Bowser Mar 10, 2026 55:09 What happens when a farming family decides to become the first private landowner in Britain to legally relocate beavers onto their farm? How do you navigate the bureaucracy, the opposition from farming neighbours and the politics of wildlife management? And can beavers actually help a farm deal with the effects of climate change? To find answers to those questions I sat down with Tom Bowser, autho
222: Saving Scotland's Red Squirrels with James Kennedy Mar 3, 2026 01:16:00 How did little over ten grey squirrels, brought to an Aberdeen zoo in 1971 to keep a tame squirrel called Jack company, turn into a population of over ten thousand? What does it take to eradicate an invasive species from a city? And could this project become the first urban grey squirrel eradication anywhere in the world? To discuss all of this I'm joined by James Kennedy, the Eradication Operatio
221: Snapshot Europe - Wildlife in Irish Woodlands with Adam F. Smith Feb 17, 2026 01:09:40 What does it take to track wildlife across 250 square kilometres of Irish woodland? How do you position cameras to capture elusive species like otters and pine martens without introducing bias into your data? What happens when floodwaters threaten your carefully placed equipment? Join us as we follow a camera trap survey through the Clara Vale in central County Wicklow, where systematic monitoring
220: Conservation Photographer Tony Bynum on Photography, Hunting and Responsibility Feb 3, 2026 01:14:00 This episode features one of the most important conversations about hunting and impacts on nature that I can remember in 10 years of making the podcast. It's not surprising though as our guest today is a long-time supporter and friend of the podcast, Tony Bynum. Tony is an accomplished wildlife photographer who spent 15 years travelling the world photographing people hunting. He is a geographer by

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