Afleveringen
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In this episode of Field Notes, Charles Bier, the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy’s senior director of conservation science, reflects on his Seton-watch experience during a snowy winter day.
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Charles Bier discusses how conservation work has restored the Clarion River have paid off, and detail ongoing efforts.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Changes Over Time
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Once in a Lifetime...Down Along the Yough
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Charles Bier recalls his time living at the Rachel Carson Homestead.
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In the latest episode of “Field Notes,” Charles Bier, WPC senior director of conservation science, recalls the days when you couldn’t rely on GPS in the field and tells us what happened one day when his compass went haywire!
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Description here
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Charles Bier visits Buffalo Creek, his home watershed in southeastern Butler County.
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Sometimes what you’ve been looking for turns up where you’d least expect it. Charles Bier discusses finding a rare species close to home in this “Field Notes.”
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Charles Bier takes an excursion into “shale country,” at WPC’s Sideling Hill Creek Barrens Natural Area.
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The forest can be a very different place at night. In this episode, Charles Bier discusses a trip to the Allegheny River floodplain forest at night, describing the various creatures that can be found there.
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Charles Bier speaks about finding an elusive mammal on a farm in the Spring.
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Charles Bier speaks about Pennsylvania’s geologic history.
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Charles Bier speaks about a time when he discovered two rattlesnakes engaging in a duel.
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Charles Bier, the Conservancy’s senior conservation scientist, recalls his first job at the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, working at Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater as a naturalist and manger at Bear Run Nature Reserve.
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Charles Bier discusses strange sounds on a cliff face in Western Pennsylvania, while studying the green salamander, a threatened species in Pennsylvania.
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Charles Bier discusses observing aquatic life in French Creek through a glass bottom bucket. French Creek is one of the most biologically diverse waterways in Pennsylvania.
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Charles Bier recalls a volunteer bird count in where he collected fascinating observations on winter birds.
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Charles Bier speaks about a time when he discovered a plethora of hummingbirds in a secluded spot in the wilderness.