Thanks to my sister Michelle McIlroy for designing the logo!

Welcome!

Ever since I was a child, I have been very interested in nature and the environment. I have a B.S. degree in wildlife biology, and have worked as a zookeeper, wildlife biologist, and ecologist. I am conducting a brief survey of world leaders, government officials, religious leaders, corporate CEOs, environmental groups, wildlife experts, and others regarding nature and the environment. I am also very interested in religious views, customs, and beliefs from around the world, and the interactions between religion, culture, society, and the environment. This is something I am doing out of personal interest, and is not connected to any group or organization. I have been working on this project since the summer of 2006, and hope to eventually turn it into a book and/or documentary. I am hoping to make this into a global project, with responses from all segments of society. Feel free to contact me directly if you have any questions or comments. If you have not already done so, I hope that you will consider taking part in my project, and please spread the word to anyone you think might be interested! Thanks for stopping by!

TAKE THE SURVEY ONLINE HERE http://tinyurl.com/nx4ng7

September 18, 2010

Rafael Rodriguez Mojica

NatuCaribe
July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

The interaction with birds change my life when I was 12 years old. The adventure of going to the field and identify new birds species and their habitats was and still is a thrill.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Now I enjoy bird and nature photography.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

The Hyacinth Macaws are awesome creatures.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Getting to convince people, industries and governments about how to reduce carbon emissions. Continue space exploration and colonize other planets.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Learn to love Mother Nature and its wonders.

Anonymous

Private Citizen

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

That truly is impossible to determine. Hiking the Adirondacks and exploring the fields and creek near my childhood home are the first two things that came to mind.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

I had a spot near a creek that i would go to when i was upset- the bubbling sound was soothing. There was a hollow tree across the fields and into a patch of woods that was full of woodpecker holes. It was a special place while it was standing and after it fell. I loved hiking the Adirondacks, as a child and still as an adult. The feeling of ... immersion, i suppose, sang for me as a child.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

lol oh, to pick a favorite?? I could say 'chimp' because i find Goodall's observations fascinating and mirror-like. I could say dog or cat because they've been companion animals to me for so long. I could say wildcats because they fascinated me as a child. I could say falcon for the same reason. I could say chipmunk or chickadee for hours spent observing them. I guess i'll just stop now.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Apathy. Not enough people care about the problems in an effective way. Many aren't even aware of the problems, and if they are are often not very well informed about them. Our environmental problems will improve best once 'environmental impact' becomes factored into our decision making automatically, as a normal part of our decision making process, instead of as an extra step we have to remember to do/ care enough to do.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Do your honest best to consider the environment in your everyday choices. We prioritize finances and convenience over environmental impact far too often. We can't do everything all of the time, but if we all put environmental impact intentionally into our decision making process, we will have enough success to make the crucial difference.

Lindsey Duval

http://themigrationstation.blogspot.com

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Last summer (2008) I interned with Audubon Pennsylvania. Part of my duties was to put up mist nests and band birds, and also to partake in IBA point counts. The incredibly close contact of these birds completely changed the way I viewed them, and got me completely interested in becoming a birder.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

I spent part of my childhood on the now closed (and bulldozed) Loring Air Force Base in Loring, Maine. There used to be a wooded area near a playground on base housing that had trails and an abundance of blueberries. While it's sad to lose a childhood home, I've been more than happy to find out that natural area likely still exists as a nature preserve.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

The turkey vulture. I like that it is a sort of 'underdog' of birds, not loved by very many, and seen as ugly and gross due to it's featherless head and diet of dead animals. Their size alone impresses me, and the fact that they are one of nature's great recyclers fascinates me. I've also been in close contact with them and they really come across as shy, retiring, and fragile birds. People have some misconceptions about how they might attack their dogs or are vicious, but they really are harmless.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

I think the greatest challenge is to figure out many new ways of living that increase recycling of resources, using "new" resources that have less negative impact on the environment and are not as likely to dry up within decades or centuries, and having cleaner energy. There are, of course, much larger issues at stake, but I think the ones that everyone, including those with little interest in the environment, can take part in are vital.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

To remember that the environment (nature) is essentially everyone's home. I think people easily forget this, living inside their boxes, they feel sheltered from the outside. But really, a house is simply a temporary shelter inside of a much larger house - the Earth. People forgetting this simple fact shows up on the horrified faces of people who lose their homes to forest fires, earthquakes, hurricanes, and tornadoes. It is not a matter of building a bigger or stronger shelter, it's a matter of realizing that you always have that other "home," the environment, and finding ways to replenish it and work WITH it rather than against it.

Jennifer Surdam

Private Citizen

July 23, 3009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I'm not sure that any ONE interaction with any one particular animal or with nature itself has had the biggest impact on me. I literally was "raised in a barn." So, I was around nature all the time. I've always been the one to try to rescue even the worse-case of animal possible. I love them all, and they have gotten me closer with nature. I love looking outside my window and seeing trees, grass, pasture, horses, cats, dogs, etc. And I've been fascinated with it since childhood. I love animals and nature in general.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

As a child, the barn. Now, there's a creek area nearby that I love to climb the hills and the creeks. It's special for a number of reasons, and it's part of what got me back into being on the nature path.


3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I think probably as a whole, the large cats, the undomesticated, and probably the wolves. I see such a connection between them and the domesticated cats and dogs, but yet such a difference, too. It's very fascinating to me how they are so close yet so different. However, I do believe they belong out in nature, and not domesticated--while beautiful in their own right, they belong where they belong, and it's not living beside us in a home where they can't be what they were meant to be.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Now, I think it's really just pollution and the problems we as humans have created. I don't believe in "global warming." I think that's a great political game being played, but the real challenge is just a global problem with pollution--warming doesn't say anything about the problem. It's pollution, it's landfills that are full, it's ignorant people not recycling. There are so many things we can do if we stop worrying about politics and start looking at the REAL issue. I think going through landfills is a great start--what can we start recycling now? In the future, IDK, because I'm really concerned about how long in the future we'll have based on how badly we've tried to destroy what we have now. I really think that doing our best to deal with what we have now might make our greatest challenge in the future overpopulation of once-endangered species--but not if we don't take ahold of the problem NOW, as in yesterday!

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Use your head. What is that, you ask? It's that thing stuck between your legs and up your A$$. Yeah, that thing. Try it every now and again. You just might find some good ideas. Seriously, though, I think that we need to recycle as much as possible, but that means that recycling needs to be easier for everyone. In my area it's a real pain to recycle, so very few people bother to do it. If you want something to be done, you have to encourage it to the point where it can become a great habit. Recycling and composting are the two easiest things to do, when made so. But it has to be cooperative with the city dump, so people aren't searching for hours trying to find a close place to do it, yet driving an hour to get there. And buy a hybrid vehicle your next time. It does and WILL save a ton of money in the end--I have one, and I want another! :)

Doris J. Waud

Rush-Henrietta Central School District

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Living in Chiapas, Mexico in 2004-2005 in the tropics taught me to respect all nature, especially tarantulas! I must say that birdwatching has greatly impacted my life in many ways.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

During my childhood I had more freedom to go off and explore for a day than children do in today's organized world, so I would go to a creek or ride my bike around. Now I love coastal Chiapas, Mexico and parks for camping in the US. I have spent over a year sleeping in a tent when I add up our many camping trips. I also love Pt. Pelee, Ontario for birding in spring.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Birds fascinate me, especially the black-capped chickadee. In Chiapas I love the giant wren and the motmots.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Humans need to reduce our population; we have no natural predators. Our economic systems tell us to build and grow, often with little regard for what is happening to the natural world. We need to enjoy and respect the natural world around us and find happiness in relationships instead of acquiring so many things. There are people who think in this way, but it feels like the minority.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Have a sense of wonder, as Rachel Carson wisely said, to treasure the earth and its various forms of life. Respect nature; remember the passenger pigeon that once was abundant and is now extinct.

Do you have any comments or other information that you would like to share relating to this project?

Please reach the youth of this country and the world; they play video and computer games instead of going outside. In Chiapas, where my husband and I return each summer to volunteer at the Pacific coast, kids know their environment and the names of the local birds. They do not have the "resources" we have in first world countries but are happy.

Margaret Skeel

South Grafton High School

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

As a biologist, this is a hard question to answer... there have been so many! but My study of northern elephant seals set me on the path to be a biologist instead of doctor so i guess that had the biggest impact on my career.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes I grew up in Oregon and out back of my yard was a creek and willow trees and i loved it out there. Now i have 1300 acres of my own great outdoors in Australia where I love to walk and ride and watch the wildlife and protect.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I care for eagles now so raptors are very high on my list but i also love almost every other animal there is and the ones i don't love, I respect.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Human overpopulation - all the others are the result of too many people competing for the remaining resources.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Don't take it for granted.

Nancy Castaldo

Author

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Hard to say. I worked in a nature center and had a lot of interaction with a Barred Owl. Also - swimming with sea turtles, catching frogs as a kid, travels to the Adirondacks and National Parks, snorkeling, hiking in Yosemite and Muir woods.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes, the woods near my house - complete with a swamp filled with turtles and frogs! Now - perhaps my seasonal hike with my daughter up Overlook Mt. in the Catskills.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Favorite - are you kidding? That's like picking a favorite child. Okay, I'll try - turtles. I'm a turtle rehabilitator and have had several turtles over the years. They're ancient....

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

I think our greatest challenge is and will continue to be preserving our planet's biodiversity.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Tread lightly on this Earth and think of the generations to come.

Dryad

Private Citizen - Ireland

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

My Familiar (cat) & Living in a forest for a year alone.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

waterfalls or lakes as a child; lakes, mountains or forests now, but mostly pagan sacred sites.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Elephant, their unconditional family love and union, and unforgettable memories, they are gentle giants

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Climate change creating shifts in the earth and the universe as a whole and frankly there will be no future if this isn’t resolved pronto

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

use it and you will lose it, create it, preserve it, and you will deserve it

Sheila Quonoey

Presentations Sisters Wagga

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Shamanism and journeying with wolf who is a great mentor

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Just being in the bush. Now my view from my veranda which looks into the tops of trees and a gully

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I love wolves. I love wombats as they do something to me inside. I also am fascinated by elephants -such wisdom. I have cats too -very comforting

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Trying to get people to change their lifestyle so that in the future we can live more aware of the needs of the earth

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Go and sit in nature and listen, allow the stillness to speak to you. Not 1 minute but many

Anne Gilbert

Writer - Kebara Enterprises

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

trips into national and state parks, locally, because I can see what sort of environment we're surrounded with.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes. Under a huge bigleaf maple tree standing by itself, in a park about four or five blocks from where I lived

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Wolves, because they represent the wilderness so thoroughly, yet can live surprisingly close to humans, who may never see one. And domestic cats, because there is always a part of them that is "theirs alone".

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

The greatest challenge facing us now? Climate change. What else In the future, diminished resources of various kinds will start forcing us to think about solutions

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Use those that can be used -- carefully and sustainably, and enjoy the rest. The earth is a beautiful place if you respect it.

Clay McCastlain

Solar Etcetera

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Ice storm in 2000. Lost electricity. Made me get updated on solar energy to run generator.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

I was a Boy Scout. I enjoyed the campouts. My favorite place now is the mountain where I work.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

not sure

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Greatest challenge is clear cutting to make room for development. We need to balance saving environment with development needs. That won't change soon.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

We are part of an ecosystem. If you destroy it, we will also suffer.

Chuck Telford

Retired - BLM Landscape Architect

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Growing up playing in the swamps and marshed if Florida and later being a landscape architect for the U.S. Forest Service and later for the Bureau of Land Management in California and Oregon while all the time being a Landscape and Wildlife Photographer.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

A large lake with a swamp and large marsh on its north edge. Now, Eastern Oregon and California's Sierra Nevada Mtns.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I have many. Coyotes, Great Blue Herons, Egrets, and at the zoo, Giraffes and Tigers. All for their beauty.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Global warming, destruction of habitat through "development" and logging

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Enjoy it and leave it as you found it or better. Be an active conservationist and environmentalist.

Patricia Yarrow, M.A.

English Instructor - Meiji Gakuin University

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

My cat for the animal. "Nature" is too large a question since I am surrounded by it 24 x 7. It's a constant source of inspiration, from my potted plants to gardens of the past to being "out" in nature of the Black Hills of South Dakota.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

The "off limits" cattle pond in the Texas panhandle. Only source of swimming water and shade in miles. Now...the Daitokuji temple grounds in Kyoto. Real outdoors would still be Yosemite National Park, seconded by Glacier National Park.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

One that is not in a cage. The large free-range zoos are the closest to keeping out-of-luck wild animals in humane, none-traumatizing captivity. Favorite seems to be whichever one I am gazing upon. Still, I do find the zebra endlessly fascinating. Tropical fish, too. Enough of the penguins, though. Wish the African large animals were safe at home, on the range. Especially for elephants and rhinos.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Now: the pillaging of the planet by short-sighted profit seekers. Future: the recovery of the planet from the same. If possible. I am not convinced. Go Obama.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Turn off the tv and pay attention to your life for sustainable practices. Do what you can and join others. Use the internet.

Vijayan

PhD candidate

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Working in Park which has last wild population of Asiatic Lion
2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Asiatic Lion, Very tolerant of Humans and allow close approach, mutual respect

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Habitat destruction, encroachment, global warming

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Dont waste anything, sustainable living and living with in own means, ban unsupervised greed in any form

Natalie Kirschstein

Regis University

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

growing up in a fairly rural area and spending a lot of time outdoors as a child

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

yes & yes

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

otter Because they're playful and social. Plus I love the water.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

education, partisanship and people's perceptions. 1) even though everyone has heard the words "global warming" etc, I don't think many people have a real appreciation of the issues affecting the environment, many are removed from any sense of nature (a friend of mine in the UK just volunteered with some city teenagers, one of whom said she hadn't realised there was anything other than concrete and buildings in Britain!). There are also people who probably don't have the time or energy to educate themselves. 2 & 3) Because so many environmentalists also happen to be more politically liberal, the environmental concerns are often seen as something to do with political stance rather than something beyond partisan politics, making some sectors less likely to care.


5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

don't forget to care

Michael Skidmore

Zookeeper - Lincoln Park Zoo

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Seeing rhinos in the wild in Africa.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Not really, I never enjoyed roughing it as a kid, that came later.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Hard to pick one but black rhinos and wolves are up there. Wolves are just totally misunderstood and persecuted and to some extent are rhinos. Rhinos are like great big dogs usually.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Right now is overpopulation in the future will be either lack of water or global warming.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Take a trip and see how the other 2/3's of the world lives

Steven Weinstock

Private Citizen

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

When I was living in North Carolina, I had to go to an interview in Vermont. One crow followed me for the entire journey. I bonded with the crow. It seemed that the crow, "She" had chosen me. That bond still exists to this day.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

My favorite place as a child was Valley Green in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Today I frequently return to the greenbelt at the Conowingo Dam in Maryland.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

The deer is probably my favorite animal. I feel a spiritual connection. There is an air about this animal that touches me on a personal/spiritual level.


4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

I believe that the oceans are facing an ongoing onslaught due to industrial wastes and irresponsible harvesting of the oceans resources. The ocean will remain a major arena as people will focus on the air because they breath it but remain oblivious to the ocean as many can not relate to what they do not experience on a day to day basis.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

The earth is your home. It is getting smaller everyday and is very much a part of you whether you think about it or not. You can no longer ignore it any more than where you sleep. Everything dependently originates, including you. Meaning "you are the earth and the earth is you. As the earth thrives so do you. As it suffers, you share its misfortunes."

Raychelle Daniel

Private Citizen

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I grew up in a subsistence household and in a wildlife refuge. The names of our months weren't just names on a calendar, they were tied with the seasons and the events during that time, and there was always something to look forward to, and it always involved the changes that come with the seasons.


2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

My first love was the mucky stream that had marsh marigolds that made the loveliest mud pies. And of course every excuse to go out picking berries on the tundra - with only the sounds of mosquitoes, the wind and the birds. Now i live in DC - and i just can't seem to get away from the elbowing from capitol hill climbers - it seems to follow everyone in all that they do.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Arctic ground squirrels & harbor seals - they are always on alert & with reason somebody is always out there trying to eat them or so they think - but just enough survive. Their vigilant behavior makes for interesting watching.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Realizing our health is dependent upon the health of the environment.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Would you trade your well-being and health for short-term money gains? Then, think about that when you wheel and deal in the policy world.

Do you have any comments or other information that you would like to share relating to this project?

i think that these connections that people have with their environment (in my case the ocean) are hard to quantify - and policy makers seem hell bent on money - i just wish that they would make the right decisions for reasons other than money, first, and studies like yours should become more mainstream to bring these things that we care about into the general populace.

Jerry

Private Citizen

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Rides in the country with Dad looking at wild animals especially.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

I lived near the Dunkirk harbor of Lake Erie and I still enjoy going there.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I do not like zoos, feel the animals are caged/imprisoned and that is not fair. I like the birds that hang at zoos and are free to go.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

We humans are destroying the earth. We have got to be stopped.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Try to be as gentle as you can. It may not continue as we know it for very long.

Craig Pelke

Curator, Reptiles & Amphibians - Virginia Zoological Park

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

After visiting and working in zoos so long, seeing animals naturally in their wild environment has given me a greater appreciation for what they are. I still understand and appreciate the need for zoos, but animals look so much better in the wild.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

As a child...Middle Inlet Township, Marinette Co., WI. Favorite as an adult...the Sonoran Desert.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Snakes...greatly misunderstood and appreciated. Incredible beauty and potential death.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

The effects of easily transported plant and wildlife to other regions of the world. Introduced, invasives, etc....whatever they want to calle them. Also, once we save the animals from going extinct in the wild, where do we go with them...there is not enough zoo space.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Respect it...do not abuse it. It is not infinite in its existence if we abuse it.

Martha M. Carroll

Biologist, 45th Space Wing - US Air Force

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

The oceans and its inhabitants (invertebrates, sea turtles, fish, whales).

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes, the ocean. Now it's the ocean and the mountain woods.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

The crab. They eat all the wiz dizzes on the ocean bottom and turn it into a delicious meal. Seriously, they help to keep our oceans clean; one of the many janitors of the ocean

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

The greatest environmental challenge we face right now is permanent damage to the environment (CO2, overharvesting the oceans, deforestation, overpopulation and a dwindling food supply. We can all say to everyone until we are blue in the face to recycle, don't pollute, save energy, don't ruin the environment etc. We need to also realize that many populations are dealing with survival for themselves on a daily basis (what am I going to eat, how can I make a dollar today, if this thing kills me in 20 years who cares-I've got to eat today). If the western world and the more affluent countries continue with the insatiable quest for more, more, more, the world as a whole may be doomed, thrown into the real natural world of survival of the fittest and money will not be able to help or quench their want or need. Our greatest challenge in the future will be feeding the enormous populations and surviving without war over the remaining natural resources (food, air, water) that will have been so permanently depleted.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Just do your part, we cannot change the world in our lifetime but we can change ourselves.

Kathleen

Private Citizen

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Well I spent a year working in Australia studying dolphins and humpback whales, and another year in Hawaii studying humpback whales, and also time in Florida conducting research on sea turtles and bottlenose dolphins. All of that has had an enormous impact on me and has only furthered my love of the ocean and all of the things in it. There is so much we don't know and so much we have to learn, and I fear that we are going to destroy our oceans before we get a chance to see what other secrets they hold. Marine animals have fascinated me my entire life, and getting to study them in their natural habitat has been the best experience of my life. I wish everyone could see what I have seen, it provides you with so much wonder and curiosity and so much amazement at life.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

I just liked being outside as a kid...and now, I would say my favorite place is anywhere on an ocean! Anywhere where there is marine life.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

My favorite...I can't really pick one..that is tough. I love marine mammals and sea turtles, but if I had to pick, I guess I would say a bottlenose dolphin. Their behavior and their intelligence fascinates me. I would give anything to peek into their brains and see what is going on between them and what they say to each other. I always say if was reincarnated I would love to come back as a dolphin...I would give anything to know what it feels like to be able to move through the water like they do, to see things they way they can, with sonar.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

I think the greatest challenge facing us now is the same one that will continue to plague future generations...global warming and pollution and destruction of the environment. The world just seems to be on this scary path to obliteration...the environment around us is changing at such a rapid rate, and it scares me that so few people worldwide seem to care.


5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Wow...I don't know. Just get out there and experience nature! Obviously you can't appreciate something unless you have experienced it, and people won't appreciate the oceans until they have looked into a whale's eye or come face to face with a turtle..or even just taken a snorkel trip and seen the beauty the ocean holds. Get out into the woods and look around, be still and listen to what is under the surface. Just get out there, go off the beaten path, and see all of the amazing things the world has to offer, that we need to take care of. I can't wait to continue my travels!

Philip R.

Student - University of Central Florida

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

When I was younger, my Father rescued an Alligator from a local golf course here in Florida. Knowing that at the time the were endangered we and one of his friends played cowboy and somehow managed to tie it up without hurting it. My Father, Brothers, and myself helped release it into a local lake where other Alligators lived natively. I realized that while dangerous animals may pose a threat to modern civilization, their habitat should be just as important as ours and our mission should be to create harmony between the two.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes, I did, and it's currently the same now. I live about 10 miles from the St. John's river here in Florida and I see an ecosystem that is incredibly diverse, beautiful, wild, but in danger.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

My favorite animal is the Gray Wolf because of their importance to the American ecosystem and the strong familial ties that their pack contains. They're a great example of how animals that do live in family groups interact and also contain a great example in canine behavior. With America being such a dog loving society, we need them to understand our own four-legged friends, but also to maintain a healthy ecosystem.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

I think the greatest challenge facing us now and in the future is the pressure on the environment for water. With population growing larger and larger the demand for clean water is growing as well as the need to dispose of waste and sewage. People want prime real estate and they either bulldoze massive amounts of wetlands or pump them dry in order to have luxurious homes here in sunny Florida. They cry when their houses flood from our monsoon like rains then cry when water prices sky-rocket because they have ruined all of the recharge sites. If we only planned ahead and built in sustainable, well thought-out communities, water wouldn't be such a commodity.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Put yourself in the animals shoes. Do you think we would enjoy people dumping chemicals and sewage into our water, killing our children for clothing, and ripping our homes out from the ground?

Carmel de Bertaut

Student - SJSU

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Growing up in Ireland and having magpies all over the back yard

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

No

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

western scrubjay yellowbilled magpie coyote They each have a spirit and intelligence that draws me

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

over population of humans in both cases

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

take only what you need-do not produce more than one child for each individual

Anonymous

VISTA Volunteer - AmeriCorps

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Trip to the Galapagos Islands in 2003.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

No, I just liked being outside and we lived in a small neighborhood outside of town, good-sized yard, gravel road with a lake nearby. We traveled by car in the summer often to historic or national park type places. Gave me the opportunity to see a lot of the "outside". Now....I still like just being able to be outside. I lived in Chicago many years and feel the lakefront was a "great outdoors" just as much as the mountains I'm living in now in Colorado.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Can't pick favorites. Just too hard. Felines probably come to mind first, but I love visiting aquariums and a few years ago found a love for Komodo dragons. Amazing creatures. I frankly get fascinated by most animals.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Educating the public now and in the future. While it seems the public is more educated and environmentally aware I think about people like my sister-in-law who just doesn't care, despite having kids who will inherit the earth after us. The other problem with public education is the fact that we seem to jump on the bandwagon of solutions without thinking about the sustainability of them. I think of ethanol, where people may think that is helping our oil issue but the transfer of land use to grow more corn has a whole new set of problems. I don't think we think through the solutions very well and people don't seem to question that.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Think about the big picture, cause and effect, the connection between everything.

Lisa LaDore

Clerk - Rye Free Reading Room

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I spent my early years outdoors. The site was still a dairy farm, but then after many years was turned into a State College. I was always outside and saw many creatures..now I realize that was the best time.


2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

I try to walk to work every day, and always am surprised by some bird, animal , insect on my way.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I live on the east coast in the suburbs of New York City..so I'm fascinated with news of the black bear populations growing..and sitings of these wonderful animals. I'm a bear fan, but love ALL creatures.


4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

To realize everything we do impacts all life around us. To understand that all creatures have a right to their life, and are not "in our way". We must respect and share all space with them.


5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Take time to think what you could do each day to help. Even time to sit outside and observe. Walk, care, and commune with everything around you.

I. M. Popper

Poet and freelance writer

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

All wildlife and the natural world is fascinating to me and I have spend much of my life observing wildlife, plants, and being in nature. The actual wildlife interactions I have had are of a chance nature. While I love those chance encounters, I try to avoid them and to retreat from them: I don't believe humans should regularly "interact" with wildlife; it always endangers the wildlife eventually (habituated animals live short, crummy lives.) We impose our thrill seeking needs or crazy ideas that the animals want or need to spend time around us and do not respect the animals' natures or needs. Animal Planet and a host of shows confuse kids and people with no experience of wildlife. Wolves are a major study and passion with me. Interactions with dogs and other domestic animals have been very important.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes, many in my childhood and many now.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Too many to name.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Same old challenges: 1. Overcoming the natural sense of us/them about wildlife and nature--so we don't see wildlife’s needs as opposing our own. 2. understanding ourselves and our world 3. Approaching the clash of our needs and those of other creatures with a willingness to learn and with understanding and humility. Global warming, species extinctions come out of these problems.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

We have to change our beliefs about humans relationship to the wild and our beliefs about the nature of wildlife. Curiosity, sensitivity, intuition, should come from the assumption that the wild world is greater than we are, and greater than our understanding, is mysterious, and full of things for us to learn about, so we should proceed with great respect and caution. Think creatively about it. Science is a great way in too. You mention religion--Christianity and most of the major world religions emphasize human ascendancy and superiority, even in the idea of stewardship. This has led to ignorance, blindness, and many human abuses of nature, wildlife, domestic animals too, (let alone of other humans). Throw those assumptions out.

Ricardo Miller

Environmental Officer - National Environment and Planning Agency

July 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

My most memorable interaction with an animal was when i accidentally killed a Red-billed Streamertail Hummingbird as a child. This magnificent bird was perched on a branch and partially hidden from view. Eager to get a better view of the bird i tossed a huge stone to shake the branch so the bird would fly...instead it was hit and died. I was so heart broken.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Going to the beach was one of my favourite past-times as a child. My father and I would jog (and walk) about 2 miles to the beach every Sunday morning while it was still dark. We would then leave just as the sun came above the horizon. Today, my favourite outdoor activity is to go birdwatching in the lush hills of Portland or the Cockpit Country, Jamaica.... and going to the beach.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Black-throated Blue Warbler. This is a very attractive bird (particularly the male) and this was one of the first bird calls of a migrant that i learnt. It was also astonishing to know that this bird may travel 2000 to 4000 km each winter season and repeat this feat during spring to travel between the Caribbean and the US or Canada.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Presently i believe one of the biggest challenges in Jamaica is saving our forests in its natural state. In the future things might be so bad that keeping the environment in a habitable state would be our greatest challenge.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Plant a tree as often as you can.

July 05, 2010

Anonymous - Private Citizen

Student, University of Colorado, Boulder, and prospective Ecology Graduate Student

Today’s Date: January 19, 2007

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

There are so many, and the biggest impact came from a progression of experiences. Just a very few of them: Staring at a posturing anole lizard when I was maybe 4. Almost stepping on a coral snake under a swingset when I was 9, and thinking oh, how pretty! At 10 or 11 fishing for bluegill and catfish with string and bread ball rigs, or making tiny crabs surface through the sand to watch them run back to the ocean. Bioluminescence-seeing if poking a stick in the water made patterns, or turned them off. Chasing fireflies. Petting a dolphin. Watching pelicans dive for fish, and seagulls try to rob them. When Busch Gardens, Tampa, really was a garden, wondering how flamingos there all knew how to move together and why they were so pink. Riding and feeding my horse. Seeing a bear lumber by in North Carolina when I was 12. First snowfall and sled ride - I was 12. Realizing sand dollars and starfish are alive. Collecting Coquinas. Swimming with an alligator in a Georgia lake (just a small 3 footer) when I was about 14. Being on a stilt cabin porch in the Chassahowitzka River when a flock of 20 or so vultures landed on the roof and stood there for an hour with wings spread. Always wondering why. Then after getting a zoology degree, being best qualified to kill and maim lab animals for biomedical research - rats, cats, dogs, macaque monkeys, baboons, which I did for 7 years, and finally coming to understand humans had no right to exploit animals.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood?

Yes, in trees, such as our orange, tangerine and grapefruit trees, since our housing development was carved out of a Floridian orange grove, or in giant oak trees in vacant lots. Also, in the Hillsborough River, for hours at a time, swimming and messing around in small boats.

Now? Anywhere in the deserts, forests, mountains where there is no sound of motorized vehicles, or on a river messing around in small boats.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I like all animals, from zooplankton to elephants, but some favorites are small mammalian predators, as represented by mustelids, herpestids and viverrids. Their ecological niche as both predator and prey, their remarkable behavioral plasticity, and some of the species' (marten, fisher) obligate habitat specialization in areas of intense resource utilization, are all factors that fascinate me.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

I can't name just one. There are at least four: Climate change, Resource extraction, Land conversion/habitat loss, and human population growth, in no particular order, though population growth is driving all else.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

In everything you do, eat, buy, or invest, reduce your impact, and encourage everyone you know to reduce their impact. If you want kids, adopt as many as you can!

June 14, 2010

Follow me....

For those of you who read my blog and are interested in connecting with me other places, I wanted to give a few links of where else you can find me :) I am on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/jeremyjtaylor so if you are on there, feel free to add me as a friend! You can also follow me on Twitter at http://twitter.com/jeremyjtaylor I have profiles on the Biodiversity Media Alliance http://biodiversitymedia.ning.com/profile/JeremyTaylor Development Crossing http://www.developmentcrossing.com/profile/JeremyTaylor and PeaceNext http://www.peacenext.org/profile/JeremyTaylor and if you are interested in following my photography, you can view it at http://jeremyjtaylor.shutterfly.com There is an option to add yourself as a site member there to get updates when I post new photos. Also, the Earth Survey Project has a page http://www.facebook.com/pages/Earth-Survey-Project/107490655964018 and group http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=34705684632 on
Facebook if you are interested.... There are many other places where I have feeds from my blog submitted, but I wanted to at least list a few other places where you can connect with me if interested!
______________________________________________
"We do not inherit the Earth from our Ancestors; we borrow it from our Children." ~Native American proverb

June 12, 2010

Administrative- Please Ignore

This is just an administrative post to get my feeds picked up by Technorati, please ignore! Thanks! A4B6DTGEJ53V

June 02, 2010

Water Hour


Just passing this along at the request of the organization putting on the event..... Spread the word!! With all the bad news lately about the Gulf oil spill and the like, this is something we can all take part in which will help make a difference to our planet!

Water Hour is coming at 8 pm on June 11!


Wonderfully, it is taking off - especially at www.waterhour.org ; on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/n/?group.php&gid=289743054301 and on Twitter www.twitter.com/WaterHour.

This is amazing given that the first inkling was such a short time ago.

Water Hour aspires to be a global happening to protect water. The global launch will take place in June a year from now. Tangible, incremental steps will be taken starting with the all-important pilot test on June 11. Don't be fooled by the word 'pilot'. For everybody who participates, it will be the real thing. But at the same time we will be testing every dimension of the program needed for global uptake over the coming year.

Here's how you can help:

Before June 11 - Start participating yourself at the links above. www.waterhour.org, for example, has several ways to get involved. The site will guide you.

Relay this note to everybody in your networks. This is so important. Our power for change is in our combined networks.

Send the attached media release to all the media you can. [see text of media release below]

During Water Hour - Celebrate water . in big or small ways. Lots of ideas for celebrating are at www.waterhour.org.

However you celebrate, post it on one of the Water Hour social media.

After Water Hour - Return the questionnaire we will send you. Your feedback will transform the pilot into an amazing global happening to protect water.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Water Hour Press Release

Launching a global happening to protect water

First-ever Water Hour – 8 pm, June 11 - www.waterhour.org

Picture all the water in the world filling up a one-gallon pail. Now picture one tablespoon from this pail. That tiny proportion is all that’s available for human use! And because of population, pollution, over-use and evaporation caused by global warming, this precious little amount is dwindling at an alarming rate.

If the coming water crisis concerns you, here's an exciting opportunity to take action and awareness-raising to a new level. Water Hour, 8 pm on June 11 is a moment to celebrate water, to create a torrent of messages and an outburst of action for water! Water Hour takes a whole new approach - leave fear and guilt behind, reconnect with the awe and wonder of water in our lives, and create positive change from a positive place. It's about falling in love with water...all over again. Water Hour taps into the enormous power of social networks like Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and YouTube, connecting us across the globe to create something wonderful.

You and everyone in your network can participate right now at www.waterhour.org.

Just follow these steps:
1. Ready

Reconnect with your amazing, touching, hilarious experiences with water. Share your water moments on the website for a chance to win a beautiful framed print by photographer James Phillips. www.jamesphillipsphotography.com/waterhour
2. Set
Submit your ideas for how to celebrate Water Hour on June 11.You can vote for ideas submitted by others and see the top-voted ideas before the big event.
3. Go!
Take part in the top-voted ideas during Water Hour or express yourself in your own way – just be sure to share your action and messages with the world through the Water Hour social networks.
4. Keep going!
Declare your commitment, large or small, on www.waterhour.org to protect water at home and in your community.

Where we’re coming from…


For a generation, we tried the same recipe to motivate action for the environment -- disaster scenarios + guilt + don’ts - like “Don’t leave the tap running when you brush your teeth”. Yes, this has motivated action, but not the breakthrough in public engagement required by the scope and urgency of the challenges we face. Water Hour is changing the conversation. It aims to motivate in a new way, starting from a new place.

Water Hour is a celebration, a time to reflect on what water really means, and a dynamo of action to protect water. The event is designed to encourage:
· on-the-ground action and celebrations, preferably recorded in postings, photos and video to share with others online
· communication of messages worldwide through social media, with www.waterhour.org as a hub driving huge participation on Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, and YouTube.

However people choose to mark the hour, they are invited to get involved in a journey to re-awaken their connection to water, and to commit to its protection:

Savour the moment
Take a little time to reconnect with those moments in your life when you had a powerful experience with water. We’ve all had them – playing deliriously in water as a child, being awe-struck by its beauty, frightened by its power, calmed by its stillness. Ever been lashed by an angry downpour, felt a waterfall’s mist, gulped a glass when thirst won’t wait? Savour those moments and share them on www.waterhour.org/watermoments.

Celebrate
At 8 pm on June 11, celebrate! Take part in the top-voted ideas for Water Hour or express yourself in your own way. You may want to dance it, tweet it, pray it, sing it, improve it, paint it, post it on Facebook, make a sign about it, cook it, photograph it, upload photos that hold it, shout it, swim it, party it, chant it, rally for it, meditate it. However you mark the hour, share it with the world on the Water Hour social networks.

Declare
Declare your commitment to protect water. What action, large or small, will you take to conserve water in your household or workplace, to clean and protect the rivers and lakes and aquifers where your water comes from, to stop pollution, to assure that water is shared fairly?

Water Hour is an initiative of the Ecologos Institute’s wider water protection program called Water Alive. www.ecologos.ca www.water-alive.org

For further information please contact:
Nanci Malek – Bentertainment 519-925-0591 bentertainment@rogers.com

March 13, 2010

Rachel Kristiansen

Wildlife Coordinator - Energy Minerals Counties Coalition

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Humpback whale

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

The ocean

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Any kind of cat. I just have a connection with them

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Pollution - NOT carbon emissions, but litter and pollution of the oceans

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Our natural resources are being extracted by more and more environmentally-friendly methods, and land reclamation is completed quickly and efficiently. Stop fighting the benefits of their use and start worrying about real issues.

Chris MacIntosh

Private Citizen

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

So hard to say, so many. Living now in the SF Bay Area, I am still astounded that I can go to see elephant seals in their natural environment every winter. That's one of those things I still think is only a "TV program" event. When I was perhaps 7 or 8, I remember going to the Edinburgh Zoo and seeing this sign "elephant seal". Of course I knew what an elephant was, and what a seal was, but the 2 names together? I was so awed when I moved here and discovered this almost-mythical animal right here!

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yellowstone NP will always have a huge place in my heart. I spent 3 summers working for the concession, moving there from Manhattan (NY). I first learned about hiking, backpacking, developed my curiosity about the natural world and geology, and have never been an urbanite again.


3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Domestic animal: cats "wild" or zoo animal: snow leopard evokes memories of childhood visits to Whipsnade Zoo, where they had a pair (this was back in the 1950s and 60s) which I thought were such beautiful cats with their markings and thick tails.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Excessive population of humans: this magnifies the effects of everything else we do not respect enough to ensure the long-term survival and thriving of (sorry, terrible grammar).

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Learn to share. Within the human community we try to help and not harm others. We should try to extend that attitude to other species.

Bruce H. Campbell

Retired Wildlife Ecologist

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Working with Alaska brown bears from 1984-88. a magnificent animal.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes. East Eagle Creek in the wallowa mountains of north eastern OR. Spent many weekends there while growing up. Now still the same place and I wish I could still spend weekends there.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Alaska brown bear because they are huge powerhouses that, for the most part, are pretty laid back. In my four years working hands-on with them, I never had a negative experience with one. Had many face-to-face encounters including female with 2 yo cubs. I'm not afraid of this animal but I have a huge amount of respect for them.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Continued habitat loss including the Amazon forest. The future challenge will be global warming.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Enjoy and take care of them. They belong to our children.

David Mozer

Director - International Bicycle Fund (www.ibike.org)

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Seeing wildlife around me riding a bicycle. The has happened both in Africa and North America. The world seems unencumbered at those moments.


2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

As a child I love the waterfalls of the Cascade Mountains (Washington State, USA). I still like the combination of mountains and raging rivers.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Black and white colobus monkey.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

private automobiles now. population in the future (starting now).

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

It takes much longer for a wound to heal that it does to cause one. This goes for wounding and poisoning Mother Nature as well.

Katie Mason

Oregon State University

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I am eternally grateful that my parents made sure that our family spent a lot of time outdoors. We hiked and camped and gardened and fished and gathered mushrooms and cross-country skiied and kayaked/canoed, and many other things. While we were engaged in these activities we were always encouraged to observe what was going on around us, lie down and watch a spider spinning a web or ants disassembling a dead mouse or a cicada shedding its skin. We always had plant and animal identification books with us and spent time identifying things and learning about them - their range, the conditions best suited to their flourishing. This appreciation and participation in the outdoors has shaped my attitude about conservation, recreation and my own lifestyle.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

My favorite places in the outdoors during my childhood were my backyard in Portland, OR (my parents lived in the city but had fruit trees, flowers, and a vegetable garden and there was always so much to do and explore in the backyard), my grandma's tree farm in Virginia (I believe it was a white pine tree farm, but basically for me it was like summer camp - swimming, fishing and canoeing in the pond, walking in the woods, learning to shoot a rifle and a bow and arrow, gardening, catching lightning bugs, watching cicadas and snakes shed their skins), and the Columbia River Gorge where my family regularly hiked and gathered mushrooms (chanterelles and morels). Today I would say that my favorite places in the outdoors are the Oregon coast, the Cascade Mountain range and the high desert of Eastern Oregon - I am a Pacific Northwesterner and find myself feeling closest/most connected to the world around me and any higher power there might be, when I am outdoors. The coast is so beautiful whether it's sunny and breezy or cold, raining and gale force winds. The ocean is mesmerizing and always makes me feel a bit small and put things in perspective. I think I feel most in my element when I am hiking in the temperate rainforest of the Cascade Mtns and the Columbia River Gorge - they are so verdant and there is so much going on that is worth exploring, looking at, watching - there is something very calming about this as well. Eastern Oregon is so different from Western Oregon - I am coming to appreciate the rather starker beauty of it - the colors are amazing and the sense of space is pretty wonderful as well. I find the light is often quite magical in Eastern Oregon. I went to college in Massachusetts and, while New England is a beautiful part of the world, I never felt as connected to the outdoors, even when out hiking or bicycling - I don't know if it had to do with how the space feels or what.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

It's hard to choose just one favorite. I have always liked river otters because of their playfulness. I have very fond memories of a pair of guinea pigs we had when I was a child - they had such personalities and go into all kinds of mischief. I find birds fascinating - their physical structure as well as their social systems. I love domestic cats and dogs and have a couple of each - their companionship and personalities can't be beat for city living. Meerkats are hysterically funny. I guess I'm drawn to animals who's social system and individual personalities are evident, upon observation, to me. For example, while I studied fisheries management policy in graduate school, I do not find fish all that interesting. I understand that I may be projecting human emotions onto animals at times, but often times animals really do have their own personalities and their social systems and hierarchies are fascinating.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Habitat loss resulting in species loss of plants, insects, and animals. Habitat loss can come from expansion of human settlements, flooding/melting associated with global climate change, clearing for agriculture and fuel wood, resource extraction, etc.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Learn about it, get out in it and enjoy it in a respectful manner and you will feel compelled to protect it in one way or another. It really can help you feel connected to the rest of the organisms on the planet and help us realize that our lives, while important, may not be the only important lives on the planet, and our troubles, while important, may not be the biggest troubles on the planet, and that we're not always the apex species (like when you're hiking through the woods and suddenly realize a bear or mountain lion has been through there recently and you think "in a fair fight (ie no guns) I wouldn't win"...not a bad thing to be reminded of every once in a while - especially when we get to thinking ourselves pretty amazing and indestructible.

Mr Keith Smith

Private Citizen

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

My dad taking me to see a white badger at night in Epping Forest.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

As a child it was the london canals and marshes. Now my local woodlands and also Northumberland.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Owls because although many are well studied many are not and i think there is still much to learn about them.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Without doubt the loss of natural habitats. Global warming will not be a problem if re - generation of the great jungles can be a possibility they are the lungs of the world.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Look after your planet and its wonders it's the only one we have.

Bill Hilton Jr.

Executive Director - Hilton Pond Center for Piedmont Natural History

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

When I was in 7th grade I brought a Praying Mantis to my science teacher who asked me to present it to the class. The big insect crawled up my sleeve and got inside my shirt, which got such a positive crowd response I decided to become a biology teacher.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

The woods near my house in Brookline, a suburb of Pittsburgh PA. Hilton Pond (York SC) is where I live and work and enjoy nature most.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I'm sort of into hummingbirds at this point; I conduct research on Ruby-throated Hummingbirds in the U.S. and Central America.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Loss of habitat through the abuse of natural resources will just about doom us and many of the organisms with which we share the planet. It may be we've already reached the tipping point and can do nothing to save ourselves.


5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

We should have wise dominion over the world, and not try to dominate it.

Claudia Munera

Biologist/Consultant, Guatemala

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I don't think it was a particular interaction, I prefer to talk about several...my mother is an animal and nature lover and then she influence in my personal perception about animals, I grew up with animals both in my house and in the family farms. Once as adult and as a biology student discovering the world of birds was very important for me.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes, I had plenty in one of the farms where we used to lived when I was a child, I love a small patch of andean forest, and to lay in a water tank that was located in front of a mountain with pines (it wasn't native pines, but at that age I didn't knew about that).

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Birds, and may especially owls and toucans. We had a small Tropical Screech Owl that fell from its nest and we take care of him...

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Currently, habitat transformation due deforestation and contamination. Then in the future we will face the consequences as climate change, famines and lack of water.


5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Save water, reduce overcomsuption, walk instead of drive whenever is possible

Maryellen Flynn

Private Citizen, Australia

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

the love and the respect that you get from animals is priceless.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

no i did not have a favourite great outdoors place , now i just enjoy sitting on my front verandah enjoying the sun.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

my brother has a six month old Shitszu ( i think that this how you spell it) and my neighbour has a beautiful Moodle dog( mixture of french poodle plus other)

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

global warming, how to stop global warming.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

protect our natural resources and just do everything that you can to respect the environment.

Michele Windsor

Area Wildlife Biologist - WI Department of Natural Resources

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Too many to count. Probably working with Moose in NW Montana and coming face to face with grizzlies and black bears while working on the project.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes. The boundary waters as a kid and the Minnesota River Wildlife Refuge (Black Dog) which was very close to my house in suburban, MN and where I took the dogs for a walk.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

cougars. The sleekness, secretive nature, beauty of the animal has always intrigued me. Bats are a close second.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Cheap energy consumption. When economic times are tight people aren't willing to spend more and are more apt to open up drilling in wildlife refuges, etc. Also tough economic times folks are less willing to invest in natural resource conservation.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

The old adage, invest in real estate because they aren't making anymore of it. Buy land to minimize developments.

Brandon L. Noel

Ph.D Candidate, Environmental Science - Arkansas State University

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Working with the Kemp's ridley sea turtle in southeast Texas is one of those moments in my wildlife career that stands out to me. Working with a species with so many obstacles stacked against it, and to see them perservere, amazing! It is a tough call between these sea turtles, shorebirds, blue whales, and the Ivory-billed Woodpecker

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Any place in the woods was a favorite place for me in my childhood, and now remote beaches during shorebird migration is one of my favorite places to be!

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Shorebirds by far! They migrate so far twice a year and they continue to lose habitat due to man's incessant desire to have waterfront property developed that should not be developed. Whoa...ease up tiger! :-)

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Habitat fragmentation, modification, and degradation due to both mans greed for more development, but also those preserved habitats and how they will change as a result of climate change

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

The importance of dispersal for all species of life. People seem to have this concept that they can isolate wildlife into small parks and everything will be fine, but do not think about the idea of breeding with siblings. Small corridors across a busy section of road or something similar has been our only option to try and allow for gene flow throughout the communities, but dispersal is more dangerous than ever with limited options and increased risks (avoiding cars, planes, boats, spills, etc.).

Maureen O'Mara

Biological Science Technician - USDA/ARS/NPARL

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I think that growing up near a forest preserve and non-mowed fields along a rail line influenced me the most out of all my experiences with nature. I was able to just leave my backyard and escape into another world. I have been doing this very thing ever since (I'm 50). My decisions about where to locate whenever I move are based on whether or not there is a place in nature to escape to.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Guess I already answered the childhood question. Now, I have the good fortune to live close to the Missouri Nat'l grasslands and the Yellowstone. Even though access to the Yellowstone River is greatly limited by land ownership there are two parks that allow public access and I will go walk along it for as long and the water level allows.


3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I don't have a favorite. I appreciate animals for the different qualities that they have. Although, I might add that I lean a bit towards bats, maybe because they are airborne like the birds that I love to watch. And when you hold one they act like they are so ferocious and will tear your head off if you don't let go of them right now!!

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

I think our attitude about development is our greatest challenge. We think the earth has unlimited space and we can just continue to populate and develop it. That leaves most people without the opportunity to have the experience that I had as a child. I believe that experience in part led my understanding that we have a connection to place and planet and we must take care to preserve it. Future challenge, more of the same of what I have described. Along with development and growth comes all the problems and we just keep growing.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

I don't usually give advice like this. I support groups who fight for our environment and other creatures that share this planet, but I don't advise. It's a very personal decision that everyone has to come to as far as their relationship with the earth. On an individual level I would rather draw people in through my actions - leaving my lawn longer, letting the clover grow for the pollinators, putting in a native plant garden, admiring and talking about the Turkey Vultures that come in to the "hood" for the summer, talking up the Grasslands, etc.

Christopher Hile

U.S. Army (Retired)

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

I grew up in the woods and had several cats. Forests have always been important to me.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

There was a pine forest nearby that held great wonder for me as a child. Now I have a thinking spot amid the wichita mountains in the Medicine Park wildlife refuge.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Any kind of cat from domestic to wild. They can be ferocious, graceful, affectionate, and are beautiful.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Right now the greatest change is the acidity level in the ocean. As it is it is eating away at our coral reefs. The greatest challenge for the future will be growing crops for biofuels and trying to prevent the runoff of fertilizer into the water systems. The fertilizer has caused the acidity rise and dead zones in the ocean with no oxygen.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Grow bamboo and industrial hemp (not the smoking kind). These are two very useful and renewable resources. People breathe oxygen produced by trees. We need to stop deforestation.


Do you have any comments or other information that you would like to share relating to this project?

I wish you good luck with this survey. Work like this is often the source of voices that need to be heard.

Joyanne Hamilton

High School Teacher, Alaska

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

BIRDS!

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes, I love the outdoors, the sky, the wide open sky.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

I never really had a favorite animal at the zoo. I didn't like zoos because of the animals being "jailed". I grew up in a time with the tiger's pacing the tiny cage. I like the newer zoos but never had a favorite ZOO animal. Maybe a giant tortoise? For some reason he stands out in my mind.

4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Loss of natural habitat. Definitely. Climate change IS ongoing, yes but loss of habitat effects population densities of all species and creates situations in which species become endangered and eventually, extinct.

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Stop building puke beige condominium neighborhoods in rural areas.

Susan Smith

Wildlife Ecologist

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

All childhood interactions and facilitated by my parents and grandparents.


2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Childhood: the southern Piedmont Now: The SE US Coastal Plain

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Life cannot exist without other life. Its kinda like asking which is my favorite body part (hum, brain or heart...)- all parts work together.


4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

The biodiversity crisis. The biodiversity crisis. An early example, Costanza et al. 1997, spells it out in dollars and cents. We cease to exist without biodiversity.


5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

We have to, as a society, set aside large expanses of land for nature. Nature has to be able to do its thing and it can't in little fragments like National Parks. Its a daunting task, but if we choose to connect the fragments of nature that remain, we may just stand a chance.

Wallace J. Nichols

California Academy of Sciences Ocean Revolution

Jul 23, 2009

1. What interaction with an animal and/or nature in your life has had the biggest impact on you?

Backpacking in the Rocky Mountains as a kid. Generally spending childhood exploring nature.

2. Did you have a favorite place in the great outdoors during your childhood? How about now??

Yes.

3. As a former zookeeper, I would love to know what your favorite animal is, and why?

Sea turtle (focus of my life's work) and mountain lion (a species in my back yard)


4. What do you think is the greatest environmental challenge facing us now, and what do you think will be the greatest challenge in the future?

Population + Corporate growth model

5. If you could give everyone one piece of advice regarding the environment and our natural resources, what would it be?

Seek true efficiency everywhere possible (STEEP)


Do you have any comments or other information that you would like to share relating to this project?

I'd be interested in any results that connect to our Mind & Ocean Initiative (www.mindandocean.org)