Through my 17 years in research, one of the biggest lessons I learned is that science alone cannot solve the biodiversity crisis. We need people to care and to change their behaviors.
In 2015, I was invited on a big expedition on Mount Kenya. Led by the Smithsonian, I went as part of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences crew to set camera traps from the national park entrance to the top – as far as we could go without technical gear.
I became a wildlife biologist because I wanted to save species from extinction. But I’ve learned over my nearly two decades in this field, that we really can’t save species without focusing on ourselves first…
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