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Description
Saving Species on BBC Radio 4 explores biodiversity, conservation and natural history, both in the UK and across the globe. We tend to think of Sloths living in the Amazon, but they also live on th...e islands off the Atlantic coast of Panama. Linked to a natural history film "Decade of Discovery", being broadcast this week on BBC 2, Saving Species has been sent a report by our team out there about the pressures impacting on the Sloths that live on these islands at the end of the Caribbean chain. We have the first of our special Ladybird Book series which has been recorded through the year. Chris Sperring takes the first editions of the famous book series about Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter - published in 1959 - and explores what species have gone, what have arrived and what hasn't changed. For sure, it's full of surprises. And sharks. With news of two species of sharks attacking holiday makers in the Red Sea what does this do to the efforts to save sharks from extinction? We talk to one expert who works with sharks on a daily basis and to another expert in the conservation of the White-tip shark, a species implicated in the attacks.
Metadata describing this Open University audio programme
Series: Saving species; Series 1
Episode 33
First transmission date: 2010-12-14
Original broadcast channel: BBC Radio 4
Published: 2010
Rights Statement: Rights owned or controlled by The Open University
Restrictions on use: This material can be used in accordance with The Open University conditions of use. A link to the conditions can be found at the bottom of all OU Digital Archive web pages.
Duration: 00:30:00
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Producer: Sheena Duncan
Presenter: Brett Westwood
Contributors: Lucinda Axxelson; Kelvin Boot; Sarah Fowler; David Gibbs; Steve Kessell; Chris Sperring; Bryson Voirin; Brett Westwood
Publisher: BBC Open University
Production number: PBS05010WZ0033
Available to public: no