Episodios

  • Oceans of change: Turtles, blue carbon & whale poo
    Oct 5 2025

    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 the ocean and miraculously adapting to a lack of krill.

    And we dive into the world of blue carbon with Dr. Alice Jones – where deep in the waters, we learn that even though our oceans are disproportionately impacted by climate change, they play a mighty role in its defence.

    Topics Covered:

    • How climate change is transforming marine ecosystems
    • Why turtle sex ratios are shifting with rising temperatures
    • The surprising ways whales support ocean health
    • What blue carbon is and why it matters in the climate fight

    Guests: Dr Melissa Staines, Vanessa Pirotta, Dr Alice Jones, Tom Vigilante, Desmond Williams, Tabitha Kowan

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    40 m
  • Traditional knowledge: Healing Country and sharing Indigenous wisdom
    Sep 21 2025

    Traditional Custodians have recorded sea level changes, volcanic shifts and meteoric events for over 10,000 years through story, song, dance and art. Since colonisation, these knowledge systems have faced immense pressure – but Tiahni is solution focused. She traces her own journey to connect with her ancestry and explores how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge can strengthen Country to help it adapt.

    With Aunty Bernice Hookey, she unpacks epistemic injustice and resilience, before heading to Birriliburu Country to meet Martu women keeping culture strong – and with Joanne Griffin, discovers a powerful new online tool for sharing knowledge, respectfully.

    Topics Covered:

    • How Indigenous knowledge systems inform environmental adaptation
    • The impact of epistemic injustice on Traditional Custodians
    • Martu women's role in cultural and ecological resilience

    Bush Heritage Australia works in partnership with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities to care for Country, combining millennia-old Traditional Knowledge with modern science – a mission that makes this episode's focus on cultural resilience and knowledge sharing especially powerful.

    Guests: Bernice Hookey, Martu women, Jodi Edwards, Joanne Griffin

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    37 m
  • Working together: Gondwana Link, Aboriginal land, and sustainable farming
    Sep 7 2025

    The landscapes of Southwest Western Australia smack you in the face with their ecological richness, according to Gondwana Link CEO Keith Bradby. He and others – including Bush Heritage – are restoring a 1000km stretch of bushlands in this global biodiversity hotspot, shaped over millions of years by glacial shifts and evolution. For Noongar Elder Lester Coyne it is a place where his people prospered long before the disruptive forces of colonisation.

    Today it is surrounded by monotonal agricultural properties. But that doesn’t mean farmers don’t also feel a deep love for nature. The question is how to balance the need to feed and resource our planet, while preserving biodiversity: our biggest natural defense against climate change.

    Topics Covered:

    • Why south-west Western Australia is a global biodiversity hotspot
    • The vision and progress of the Gondwana Link restoration project
    • How Traditional Custodians and farmers both care for Country
    • The role of biodiversity in climate resilience and food security

    Guests: Keith Bradby, Lester Coyne, Sylvia Leighton, Stephen Hopper

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    30 m
  • Surviving the heat: Climate change in deserts, numbats and knowledge
    Aug 24 2025

    Our planet is getting hotter – and deserts, covering 41% of the Earth and nearly 20% of Australia, are on the frontline. What will the sweltering and scorching temperatures mean for the people and species that live there? At Secret Rocks in South Australia, Tiahni joins Dr Katherine Moseby and Jack Bilby who are braving extreme temperatures to help to protect native animals like bilbies and numbats survive.

    Gareth Catt from the Indigenous Desert Alliance tells of how deserts are changing rapidly, making the practice of reading Country more difficult for Traditional Custodians.

    Author Clive Hamilton explores resilience as social justice, while Dr. Rebecca Spindler urges bold, science-driven solutions – to make sure people and wildlife alike can handle the heat.

    Topics Covered:

    • How rising temperatures are transforming Australia’s deserts
    • What’s being done to protect desert wildlife like bilbies and numbats
    • The challenges climate change poses to reading and caring for Country
    • Why social justice and science must go hand in hand in climate resilience

    Guests: Dr Katherine Moseby, Jack Bilby, Gareth Catt, Clive Hamilton

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    34 m
  • Restoring nature: Platypus comeback, oyster reefs and habitat corridors
    Aug 10 2025

    When nature is destroyed and removed, can we ever truly restore it? Across Australia, scientists and communities are sharing powerful stories of ecological restoration – from city rivers to deep-sea reefs. In Adelaide’s River Torrens, urban ecologist Prof. Chris Daniels is leading platypus reintroduction for the city. Downstream near Glenelg beach, one of Australia’s true conservation success stories is occurring underwater: marine scientist Dr Dominic McAfee is restoring oyster reefs, using the sounds of the sea. In Southwest Western Australia – a global biodiversity hotspot – entire ecosystems are being revived from the soil up. Restoration is getting smarter and stronger, one tree, one banksia, one oyster at a time.

    Guests:

    • Dr Dominic Mcafee, shellfish restoration expert
    • Professor Chris Daniels, University Professor and Chair of the Board of Green Adelaide
    • Alex Hams, former Healthy Landscapes Manager, southwest WA, Bush Heritage Australia

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    40 m
  • Trees & Climate: Bob Brown, cultural connection, and why forests matter
    Jul 27 2025

    On an island at the edge of the Earth – Lutruwita/TasmaniaTiahni sits down with legendary environmentalist Bob Brown. Among flowering blackwoods, they explore tree conservation and community, courage and staying optimistic. She speaks with Pakana Elder Hank Horton on deep cultural ties to trees, and with arboriculturist Dr Gregory Moore about a sobering truth: without trees, humans can’t exist.

    These biodiversity magnets store carbon, support life and help us breathe – so why are we still clearing trees? What would the world look like if we protected them instead? Find out more about the vital role of trees in fighting climate change.

    Topics Covered:

    • Why tree conservation is critical to our survival
    • The emotional and ecological power of trees
    • The importance of Indigenous ties to Country

    Guests: Dr Bob Brown, Gregory Moore, Uncle Hank Horton

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    27 m
  • Big Sky Country Season Three Trailer
    Jul 17 2025

    Prepare for Big Sky Country Season 3, our most expansive season yet. In six captivating new episodes, we take you down the backroads of this diverse country to investigate how biodiversity quietly – and powerfully – offers solutions to the climate crisis.

    Hosted by wildlife conservation biologist and proud descendant of the Kaurareg nations Tiahni Adamson – the 2024 Young South Australian of the Year – this series introduces you to people with moving, personal stories who are restoring and protecting ecosystems one block, one banksia, one oyster at a time. If you’re familiar with our first two seasons, you’ll notice one big change - we’ve ventured into the broader conservation space, offering up big ideas, big voices and big solutions.

    You'll meet die-hard conservationists safeguarding tree species that dinosaurs once ate. Scientists measuring the body temperatures of desert animals to help them survive climate change. Traditional Custodians who are reading the signals from plants, animals, landscapes and Country – physically, spiritually, emotionally – and lending their knowledge to show us all how to live in balance, so that we don’t simply survive, but thrive.

    Subscribe now

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    3 m
  • Learning Garawa
    Apr 10 2023

    It’s a two-day drive from Darwin to Robinson River, on Garawa Country in the NT, just south of the Gulf of Carpentaria. While the road there can be long, the destination is worth it. The annual Waanyi Garawa Biodiversity and Culture Camp brings together Elders, rangers and kids together to keep their culture and language strong.

    While remote communities face many challenges without easy access to country, these camps create an opportunity for dance, storytelling and play, and for community leaders to pass down important ecological and cultural knowledge to the next generation.

    Featuring Aunty Nancy McDinny, Uncle Jack Green, Karen Noble, Donald Shadforth, Dr Terry Mahney, and Kelly Retief.

    Produced by Will Sacre and Eliza Herbert.

    Support the show

    Bush Heritage Australia is a leading not-for-profit conservation organisation that works to protect and regenerate millions of hectares of ecologically important land across the continent. This podcast's focus on trees and Country is especially vital to understanding and advancing Australia's conservation future.

    Get email updates: https://www.bushheritage.org.au/news/subscribe

    Learn more about the show and our work at www.bushheritage.org.au or follow us on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, or X

    Más Menos
    17 m