About
Carey Peterson is a professional writer, editor and conservationist. She is co-author, with friend and former husband Robert Glenn Ketchum, of
The Tongass: Alaska’s Vanishing Rainforest, published by Aperture. In addition to many local conservation initiatives in the various places she has lived, including New York, Hawaii, California, and Washington State, she served as development director for Rod Jackson and Darla Hillard at The Snow Leopard Conservancy. She has traveled through all 50 states, and much of China, Japan, Europe, Central America, and Africa. She is currently a Managing Director of the
Solitaire Land Trust in Namibia, a habitat and migration corridor restoration project and has lived on the edge of the Namib Desert for the past 9 years.
Topics
* Letting Namibia rewild itself
* How fencing challenges wildlife movement and the ongoing work to remove fences and save wild lives
* The importance of private landowners being able to connect to national international databases and tracking soil, species, rainfall, and other metrics for operations under 100,000 acres
* What kills more wildlife than poaching?
* The impacts of cattle grazing in Namibia
* What it’s like to be trapped on the wrong side of a fast-moving wildfire
* Water issues challenge rewilding Namibia
* Human wildlife conflict in Namibia
Extra Credit
Visit and support
Solitaire Land Trust
Reading
Read Carey’s article here on
Rewilding.org:
Solitaire Land Trust – A Contribution to Rewilding Namibia
Biodiversity and the need for refuge
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Biodiversity, climate change, and mass extinctions
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Mammals Going Nocturnal to Avoid Humans
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Vultures in Africa
Connectivity, fences and migration
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Wildebeast Faces Extinction
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How Bison Create Spring
Connectivity_CLLC_and_partners from
The Center on
Vimeo.
The colonial origins of a fenced-off Southern Africa
Caught between a Rock and a Hyrax: Consequences of Vermin Control in Namibia
wild oryx, Namibia from
carey peterson on
Vimeo.
30 x 30: where will the money come from?
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farmland-extinction.html">Restoring Farmland Could Drastically Slow Extinctions, Fight Climate Change
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The World’s Banks M...