Hopefully you’ve watched Kingdom of the Blue Whale by now, and I won’t be spoiling all the fun for you. If you have managed to miss it, then read my original review and tune into National Geographic Channel tomorrow, March 15, at 1pm. The special brought up a lot of really important conservation issues facing [...]
Posts Tagged ‘cetaceans’
It’s a Big Ocean, But Is It Big Enough For Both?
Posted in Conservation Biology, Endangered Species, Extinction, Genetics, Marine Life, Poaching, tagged anthropogenic noise, blue whales, cetaceans, CITES, forensics, hybridization, Internation Whaling Commission, Kingdom of the Blue Whale, marine mammals, National Geographic, ship strikes, sonar, strandings, threats, whaling on March 14, 2009 | 4 Comments »
Kingdom of the Blue Whale on National Geographic
Posted in Conservation Biology, Endangered Species, Genetics, Marine Life, Poaching, tagged blue whales, cetaceans, crittercam, National Geographic on March 7, 2009 | 6 Comments »
Clear your schedule for Sunday night. That’s right, you heard me. CLEAR YOUR SCHEDULE! Because on March 8, 2009 at 8pm EST you HAVE to watch Kingdom of the Blue Whale on National Geographic Channel. I had the pleasure of watching the special in advance, compliments of the wonderful Minjae Ormes, digital consultant for National [...]










