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The Modern Naturalist

Second episode from the Hay Festival, and Monty Don asks if traditional naturalist skills are disappearing and if technology is liberating naturalists to observe in a different way.

Monty Don presents a special Shared Planet in front of an audience from the Hay Festival. Naturalists have always relied on and contributed to the illustrated guide book to observe and record wildlife, but is this so today? The modern naturalist has more than just books at their disposal, with field guides on mobile phones and tablet computers giving more than just words; sounds and moving pictures too. Monty Don asks whether the traditional naturalist skills are disappearing and with them the naturalist, or whether technology in an increasingly crowded world are liberating naturalists to observe and record wildlife in a different way generating a new generation of naturalists fit for the planet they share with nature.

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Mon 23 Jun 2014 21:00

Mark Avery

Mark Avery

Mark Avery is a scientist by training and a naturalist by inclination who听writes about and comments on environmental issues. He worked for the RSPB for 25 years, 13 of which听he was Conservation Director before听standing down in April 2011 to go freelance.

Mark lives in rural Northamptonshire and is a member of听the RSPB, the Wildlife Trusts, the National Trust, Buglife, Plantlife, Butterfly Conservation, Pond Conservation, the BTO and听the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust.

@Twitter: Mark_Avery

Alex Rhodes

Alex Rhodes

Alex Rhodes is a young naturalist, bird-ringer and aspiring Natural History presenter based near Bristol. He has an interest in adventure and is compelled to seek out听and document stories within the natural world, viewing the use of media as a powerful tool to do this.

Alex is preparing for听a听gap year of听further research and exploration before reading Zoology at university.

@Twitter: Alex_Rhodes

Broadcasts

  • Tue 17 Jun 2014 11:00
  • Mon 23 Jun 2014 21:00

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