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Wetland Pond
Photograph by Krista Schlyer/Meet Your Neighbours/iLCP
In August 2012, more than 5,000 people participated in a 24-hour BioBlitz in Colorado's Rocky Mountain National Park. The annual event, held in a different national park each year, brings in students, scientists, and others for a 24-hour species count. This year's tally: 489 plant and animal species.
Pictured here is a wetland pond near Lily Lake, one of the BioBlitz's many scenic inventory sites.
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Inspiring Youth
Photograph by Mark Christmas/iLCP
National Geographic Emerging Explorer and environmentalist Juan Martinez speaks to the crowd during the 2012 BioBlitz opening ceremony. Martinez encourages young people to go outside and celebrate the positive value of nature.
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Biodiversity Festival
Photograph by Mark Christmas/iLCP
Kids participate in the Biodiversity Festival, a celebration that included nature-inspired activities, photography workshops, art, live animal demonstrations, and hands-on science activities.
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Preparing to Explore
Photograph by Kevin FitzPatrick/iLCP
A group of students prepares to look for plant and animal species during an inventory at Rocky Mountain National Park's Beaver Meadows. More than 5,000 people, including more than 2,000 schoolchildren, participated in the 2012 BioBlitz.
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Working Together
Photograph by Kevin FitzPatrick/iLCP
National Park Service Director Jonathan Jarvis participates in a species inventory with students at Beaver Meadows.
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New Perspectives
Photograph by Krista Schlyer/Meet Your Neighbours/iLCP
Participants and photographers had the opportunity to take a unique look at species, like this cone from a lodge pole pine that was found during the Lily Lake inventory.
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Examining Findings
Photograph by Karine Aigner/Meet Your Neighbours/iLCP
A 2012 BioBlitz participant shows off her finding during a species inventory at Rocky Mountain National Park's Lily Lake.
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Lake Life
Photograph by Karine Aigner/Meet Your Neighbours/iLCP
Students wade into Rocky Mountain National Park's Lily Lake to look for species during a Friday inventory. Inventories were led by nearly 200 scientists from around the country.
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Critter Chase
Photograph by Morgan Heim/iLCP
The American pika was one of 12 mammal species spotted in Rocky Mountain National Park. A preliminary total of 489 species, including birds, fungi, insects, and different types of plants, were identified during the 2012 BioBlitz.
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Rocky Mountain High
Photograph by Morgan Heim/iLCP
A group of participants takes part in an alpine vascular plants inventory at around 11,000 feet in Rocky Mountain National Park.
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Wildlife
Photo by Krista Schlyer/Meet Your Neighbours/iLCP
Among the 12 mammal species found was the elk, spotted here in the alpine area of Rocky Mountain National Park. The 2012 BioBlitz was the sixth in a series of ten annual events that will lead up to the National Park Service's centennial in 2016.
BioBlitz Blog
Past BioBlitzes
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BioBlitz 2012: Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado
See photos of what happened when more than 5,000 people participated in a 24-hour species count in Rocky Mountain National Park.
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BioBlitz 2011: Saguaro National Park, Arizona
Five thousand volunteers at the 2011 Saguaro National Park BioBlitz added over 400 species to park lists.
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BioBlitz 2010: Biscayne Bay, Florida
The first ever marine BioBlitz took place in Florida’s Biscayne Bay.
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Steady Hands and Fins
Photographer David Doubilet photographs in the depths of the southwest Pacific, New Zealand, and more.
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Survival Guide: Dodging Locusts
Swarm behaviorist Iain Couzin has a toxic reaction to a locust at the same time his team runs out of food.
Listen: Explorer Interviews
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00:08:00 Bruce Bachand
Many people picture archaeology as the swashbuckling adventure portrayed in the Indiana Jones trilogy. But in reality, it can be much more tedious than discovering the Holy Grail and fighting Nazis. National Geographic grantee Bruce Bachand has been meticulously sewing a 3,000 bead necklace back together in Mexico after discovering a pre-Olmec burial site that housed a tribal chief and his wife, undisturbed for several centuries.
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00:09:00 Catherine Jaffee
Turkey is famed for its honey, which is music to Boyd's ears—he has a notorious sweet tooth. He visited National Geographic grantee Cat Jaffee, a beekeeper who left her job in Washington, D.C. to make honey in rural Turkey. She says that bees harvest pollen from their surroundings: the best honey comes from bees with natural surroundings, large meadows, rather than urban environments. Most people, Jaffee says, eat honey that is basically a synthetic mix of sugars from all over the world.
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00:09:00 Elizabeth Lindsey
Most of human history existed before the advent of GPS technologies that can pinpoint where we are at any time. National Geographic Fellow and ethnonavigation expert, Elizabeth Lindsey has taken it upon herself to understand what it was like for Polynesian explorers to colonize tiny, remote islands across the south Pacific Ocean. To better appreciate the skills it takes to study the clouds and winds in search of land, Lindsey plans to join a team of Polynesian women who are island-hopping using traditional methods: no GPS, no cellphones and no compass.
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00:11:00 Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner(blurb here)
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00:11:00 Lucy Cooke
Lucy Cooke
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00:11:00 Wade Davis
How did the death and destruction of World War One lead young British climbers to attempt an epic conquest of Mount Everest? National Geographic Explorer in Residence Wade Davis answers that question in his new book “Into the Silence: The Great War, Mallory, and the Conquest of Everest.” Davis joins Boyd in the studio to chat about the book.
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00:09:00 Joshua Ponte Audio
National Geographic Emerging Explorer Joshua Ponte was a successful young English entrepreneur when, over breakfast one morning, his eye fell on a newspaper ad that said "Gorilla Reintroduction Program, Gabon." His life has never been the same since. Pursuing his passion for conservation, Ponte moved to a central African forest where 13 orphaned gorillas were being studied. Boyd talks with Ponte about the joys and dangers of raising young gorillas.
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00:11:00 Nathan Wolfe
National Geographic Emerging Explorer and virus hunter Nathan Wolfe says there is a disease pandemic lurking just around the corner. But, we can prepare ourselves. Wolfe says there are even ways to harness and use the power of viruses. Wolfe joins Boyd to talk about his new book, The Viral Storm: The Dawn of a New Pandemic Age, which is changing the way we think about viruses.
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00:11:00 Dereck and Beverly Joubert
National Geographic Explorers-in-Residence Dereck and Beverly Joubert capture astounding images of African wildlife in their beautiful films. The Jouberts live in the African bush alongside the lions and other animals they profile. They explain to Boyd that, because big cats are in such danger, their work is now focused on conservation projects such as the Cause an Uproar program.
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00:11:00 Lee Berger Audio
National Geographic grantee and paleoanthropologist Lee Berger has been searching for the fossils of human ancestors, but it was his 9-year-old son who stumbled upon the find of a lifetime: a partial skeleton that may very well change our understanding of the genus Homo.
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00:07:59 Brad Norman
Some go swimming with dolphins or stingrays, Brad Norman, National Geographic Emerging Explorer and marine conservationist, talks about swimming with the largest fish in the world: the whale shark. Norman speaks with Boyd about his research concerning whale shark habitats, tracking and conservation.
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00:11:00 Losang Rabgey
National Geographic Emerging Explorer Losang Rabgey has found her life's work in strengthening rural communities on the Tibetan plateau, which includes building schools to educate local students. Rabgey joins Boyd with updates on the successful work of Machik, the non-profit she founded and now directs.
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00:11:00 Sylvia Earle
National Geographic Explorer in Residence Sylvia Earle has been deeper undersea than any other woman. Earle is an oceanographer, explorer, author, lecturer, field scientist, and an inspiration to women around the world. She recently received the Royal Geographic Society’s 2011 Patron’s Medal. Boyd talks to Earle about some of her early dives in the Jim Suit.
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00:06:00 Valerie Clark
National Geographic grantee Valerie Clark licks frogs for a living. As Clark tells Boyd, she’s not looking for Prince Charming. Instead, she is studying how the diet of frogs in Madagascar relates to the toxicity of their skin.
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00:11:00 Bob Ballard
Boyd heads out of the studio to join National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Bob Ballard aboard his vessel the E/V Nautilus. Currently in Turkey, Ballard tells Boyd about the many shipwrecks he is finding in the Mediterranean. You can follow Ballard and his team, live as they explore the ocean at www.nautiluslive.org.
