podcast
details
.com
Print
Share
Look for any podcast host, guest or anyone
Search
Showing episodes and shows of
Hakai Magazine
Shows
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Fleet-Winged Ghosts of Greenland
by Caroline Van Hemert • A mysterious population of peregrine falcons in the Far North has inspired environmental action and scientific research around the world. The original story can be found on hakaimagazine.com. Listeners, we have some important news. If you don’t get our weekly newsletter, you may not have heard that Hakai Magazine will be shutting down at the end of December. In July we found out that our long time funder is refocusing their efforts and won’t be funding us after 2024. So sad to say, this feed will be going blank at the...
2024-12-03
36 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Secret Sex Lives of Deep, Dark Corals
by Christian Elliott • A unique fjord in Chilean Patagonia gives scientists a chance to unlock the reproductive secrets of cold-water corals that typically live thousands of meters below the ocean’s surface. The original story can be found on hakaimagazine.com. Listeners, we have some important news. If you don’t get our weekly newsletter, you may not have heard that Hakai Magazine will be shutting down at the end of December. In July we found out that our long time funder is refocusing their efforts and won’t be funding us after 2024. So sad to say...
2024-11-27
33 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: The Sound Aquatic Episode 5
In May 2021 Hakai Magazine published a five-episode mini podcast called The Sound Aquatic. While our team has a break over the holidays, we’re bringing you that series. Here’s the final episode, “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.” By now, we know the ocean is anything but silent. Fish grunt, whales moan, reefs roar with the deafening sound of snapping shrimp, and even natural sounds like waves and rain can be heard throughout the ocean. But people have taken it to the next (decibel) level, with global shipping, oil and gas rigs and exploration, sonar, and fishing and recr...
2023-12-30
26 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: The Sound Aquatic Episode 4
In May 2021 Hakai Magazine published a five-episode mini podcast called The Sound Aquatic. While our team has a break over the holidays, we’re bringing you that series. Here’s the fourth episode, “Learning to Speak Whale.” “Culture” is a tricky thing to define—anthropologists still don’t totally agree what comes under its umbrella. But by any measure, it’s getting clearer and clearer that humans aren’t the only ones who have it. And below the waves you’ll find some of the most famous and mysterious nonhuman cultures of all. Find show notes and a transcript...
2023-12-29
30 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: The Sound Aquatic Episode 3
In May 2021 Hakai Magazine published a five-episode mini podcast called The Sound Aquatic. While our team has a break over the holidays, we’re bringing you that series. Here’s the third episode, “Plenty of Fish.” Ah, l’amour. Finding a mate is a big part of life for all animals and those beneath the waves are no exception. Of course, this search for love often involves—you guessed it—sounds. From the booming grunt of a fish trying to lure a lucky lady to his lair, to the mournful moan of a whale, sending out deep, loud sounds ac...
2023-12-28
26 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: The Sound Aquatic Episode 2
In May 2021 Hakai Magazine published a five-episode mini podcast called The Sound Aquatic. While our team has a break over the holidays, we’re bringing you that series. Here’s the second episode, “How Not to Get Lost in the Ocean.” Sound travels far underwater. And it travels fast, too—about four and a half times faster than it does through air. So it’s no wonder animals use sound to find their way around. Imagine being able to “see” your way through pitch black depths just by listening to the waves, other creatures, or even ambient noise, such as m...
2023-12-27
26 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: The Sound Aquatic Episode 1
In May 2021 Hakai Magazine published a five-episode mini podcast called The Sound Aquatic. While our team has a break over the holidays, we’re bringing you that series. Here’s the first episode, “Can You Hear Me Now?” When Elin Kelsey and the producers of The Sound Aquatic podcast first gathered in early 2020 to create a podcast about ocean sounds, they had no idea what an amazingly unique year 2020 would be for anyone listening in on the ocean. In this episode, Elin takes a deep dive into the wonderful world of fish sounds and finds out what...
2023-12-26
22 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus episode: The Demon River
by James MacKinnon • On the night of November 15, 2021, British Columbia’s Nicola River sounded like thunder. Boulders boomed beneath a raging current that was bursting its banks, taking out everything in its path. Residents along Highway 8 were devastated by the destruction. But they were not alone. Communities all over southwest British Columbia felt the impact of flooding and landslides unleashed by an “atmospheric river” rainstorm. It was the costliest disaster in the province’s history, resulting in an estimated $13 billion worth of damage. Yet no place experienced flooding like the Nicola Valley, a dry-belt area that rarely sees extreme rain. ...
2023-07-13
1h 40
Full Power Podcast
Can Majin Buu be Hakai'd?【Ep. 92】FPP
Kai brought up a question regarding if Majin Buu could be Hakai'd and stay hakai'd. What do y'all think? 😎☝🏽 🔥 Feel free to hit us up for comments, questions, concerns, business inquiries and future episode topics at fullpowerpod@gmail.com ✨HelloFresh sponsor: https://strms.net/hellofresh_uchigames ✨Coupon code: POGHF36754 ========= 🔥🔥Get your name shouted out, extra episodes, and support us further by becoming a Thriving Oozaru on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/fullpowerpodcast 🔥🔥Safely gift us items for the studio!: https://throne.me/u/uchi 🔥Subscribe to the FULL POWER PODCAST CHANNEL: ht...
2023-02-06
1h 13
Helma Vendéghang
Helma Kiadó Podcast Ajánló Noah Noé Noir Kyoshi és Chloé Tizedik fejezet Seikatsu és Hakai (Élet és Pusztulás) (részlet)
A Helma Kiadó Podcast Ajánlóban Noah Noé Noir elsőkötetes, fiatal író Kyoshi és Chloé című fantasy regényének tizedik fejezetéből hangzik el egy rész, melynek címe Seikatsu és Hakai (Élet és Pusztulás)
2022-12-16
37 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Unearthing the Original Mediterranean Diet
by Paul Greenberg • Archaeologist Dimitra Mylona’s odyssey to reveal the Mediterranean Sea’s lost bounty. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-12-13
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Mumbai Embraces Its Booming Flamingo Population
by Vaishnavi Chandrashekhar • Despite pressure from development, flamingos seem to be thriving on the shores of one of the world’s most populous cities, and local people are becoming protective of the birds and their habitat. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-12-06
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Is Sausage the Missing Link in the Great Bait Debate?
by Moira Donovan • Lobster and snow crab fisheries are booming, but the bait used to catch them—herring and mackerel—is not, so the search for alternative baits is on. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-11-29
23 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Price of Paper
by Larry Pynn • Coastal communities around the world contend with the toxic legacies of pulp and paper mills. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-11-22
20 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Welcoming Herring Home
by Lauren Kaljur • In Howe Sound, British Columbia, a new generation of stewards is keeping careful tabs on the comeback efforts of a tiny fish with big cultural value. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-11-08
18 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Marine Lab in the Path of Fury
by Boyce Upholt • At the DeFelice Marine Center, researchers and staff are living, working, and adapting to climate change in real time. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-11-01
25 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Climate Activists Are Waging a New Kind of Legal Fight
by Isabella Kaminski • In the face of bigger wildfires, deadlier floods, and more extreme weather, plaintiffs around the world are taking up a new tactic: suing for the damage climate change has already wrought. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-10-25
12 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Murder at Sea
by Sarah Tory • When a grainy video of a grisly mass shooting on the high seas surfaced, one determined detective and a host of NGOs went on a quest for justice. The original story can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-10-18
55 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Something’s Jellyfishy in the State of Italy
by Agostino Petroni • Jellyfish as a human food source has been touted as a solution to the increasing populations of these gelatinous invertebrates, but are Mediterranean diners really ready to have jellyfish for dinner? The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-10-11
17 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Surf and Turf: Saving a Wave by Protecting the Land
by Victor R. Rodríguez • In Mexico, scientists, surfers, and a passionate community rally to protect a beloved break. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-10-04
11 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
A Moonshot for Coral Breeding Was Successful
But the coral are trapped in tanks, still waiting to be released on the reefs. • by Alex Riley The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-09-27
16 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Philadephia’s Diatom Archive Is a Way, Way, Wayback Machine
by Jack Tamisiea • A cache of phytoplankton held at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University is helping to reconstruct historical coastlines. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-09-20
18 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Mysterious, Vexing, and Utterly Engrossing Search for the Origin of Eels
by Christina Couch • To save endangered eels, researchers have been working for decades to figure out where they reproduce. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-09-13
16 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Kelly the Sassy Dolphin
by Rose Eveleth • What can one brash dolphin teach us about personality? Originally published in October 2018, the story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-09-06
29 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
With Old Traditions and New Tech, Young Inuit Chart Their Changing Landscape
by Cheryl Katz • For generations, hunting, and the deep connection to the land it creates, has been a mainstay of Inuit culture. As the coastline changes rapidly—reshaping the marine landscape and jeopardizing the hunt—Inuit youth are charting ways to preserve the hunt, and their identity. tktktktk
2022-08-30
14 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Letting Go of Paradise
by Steven Ashley • Three years after Superstorm Sandy slammed into New Jersey’s coast, few local communities want to accept that the Shore’s glory days are numbered. Originally published in October 2015, the story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-08-23
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
North Carolina’s Oysters Come Out of Their Shell
by Emily Cataneo • In the tradition of wine and ale trails, the state’s oyster trail aims to give the farmed shellfish industry a needed boost. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-08-09
13 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Of Roe, Rights, and Reconciliation
by Ian Gill • On the British Columbia coast, the Heiltsuk First Nation asserts its rights to manage its resources, and who has access to them, through the seasonal herring harvest. Originally published in August 2018, the story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-08-02
33 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Romance, Politics, and Ecological Damage: The Saga of Sable Island’s Wild Horses
by Moira Donovan • They’ve roamed free for hundreds of years, but is that freedom harming the ecosystem they call home? The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-07-26
23 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Living in a Doomed Paradise Where the Sea Consumes Cottages, Cliffs, and the A&W Drive-Thru
by Taras Grescoe • Quebec’s Magdalen islanders face a stark choice: resist, adapt, or give in to the ravenous sea. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-07-19
31 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Controversial Plan to Unleash the Mississippi
by Boyce Upholt • Our long history of constraining the river through levees has led to massive land loss in its delta. Can we engineer our way out? And at what cost? The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-07-12
35 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Groomed to Death
by Brendan Borrell • Urban beaches around the world have less garbage than remote beaches, but less life too. The City of Santa Monica hopes to change the image of a clean beach. Originally published in July 2018, the story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-07-05
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
A Community’s Quest to Document Every Species on Their Island Home
by Marina Wang • Naming leads to knowing, which leads to understanding. Residents of a small British Columbia island take to the forests and beaches to connect with their non-human neighbors. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-06-28
34 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
And Then the Sea Glowed a Magnificent Milky Green
by Sam Keck Scott • A chance encounter with a rare phenomenon called a milky sea connects a sailor and a scientist to explain the ocean’s ghostly glow. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-06-21
14 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Warning! Signs Are Not Enough to Save Beachgoers from Deadly Currents
by Chloe Williams • Keeping people out of rip currents is more about reading human behavior than reading warning signs. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-06-14
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: Salt, Sweat, and Grit
The Race to Alaska is one of the most grueling at-sea races, taking participants from Port Townsend, Washington, to Ketchikan, Alaska, as they navigate complicated currents, narrow rocky channels, and inclement weather. The premise is simple: travel more than 1,200 kilometers with no motors, no support, and a USD $10,000 award waiting for the winner. Racers prepare sailboats, kayaks, paddleboards, or any manner of non-motorized vessels for a chance to put their paddle to the mettle in the ultimate marine race. But what drives people to take on such extreme adventures? In this special episode Hakai Magazine editor Jude...
2022-06-09
52 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 4 of 4 — Tribal Hatcheries and the Road to Restoration
by Ashley Braun • In the US Pacific Northwest, tribal hatcheries uphold Indigenous communities’ treaty rights to salmon, while buying time to rehabilitate lost habitat. This is final part of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-06-03
38 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 3 of 4 — The Hail Mary Hatcheries
by Vanessa Minke-Martin • As wildfires, droughts, and floods deal a blow to coastal habitats, wild salmon are disappearing from waterways like California’s Russian River. Can conservation hatcheries save endangered runs? This is part three of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-06-02
36 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 2 of 4 — Too Many Pinks in the Pacific
by Miranda Weiss • Evidence is mounting that pink salmon, pumped by the billions into the North Pacific from fish hatcheries, are upending marine ecosystems. This is part two of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos and map, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-06-01
27 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 1 of 4 — The Hatchery Crutch: How We Got Here
by Jude Isabella • From their beginnings in the late 19th century, salmon hatcheries have gone from cure to band-aid to crutch. Now, we can’t live without manufactured fish. This is part one of our special four part editorial package on salmon hatcheries. The original story, along with photos and map, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-05-31
30 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
It’s 10 PM. Do You Know Where Your Cat Is?
by Egill Bjarnason • In Iceland, traditionally a land of cat lovers, bans and curfews are redefining the human relationship with domestic cats. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-05-17
27 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Surviving the Race to Alaska
by Aldyn Chwelos • This motor-free ocean race—with vessels ranging from paddleboards to pedal-assist sailboats—is less about how fast you can go and more about whether you get there at all. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-05-10
23 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
How the Shipping Industry Sails through Legal Loopholes
by Paul Tullis • A murky world of shell companies, flags of convenience, and end-of-life flags allows companies to dodge accountability and dispose of ships cheaply. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-05-03
32 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Queen Conch’s Gambit
by Cynthia Barnett • The first and only queen conch hatchery and nursery run by local fishers is poised for duplication across the Caribbean—but even if conch farming can help ease overfishing, can it survive in warming, storm-lashed seas? The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-04-26
30 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Slime, Shorebirds, and a Scientific Mystery
by Daniel Wood • Could the survival of millions of migrating shorebirds depend on the preservation of humble marine biofilm? Originally published in November 2016, the story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-04-19
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Viruses Are Not Always the Villain
by Saima Sidik • We can thank microbes for moving carbon to the depths of the ocean, but will our changing world mess with their good work? And should we intervene? The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-04-12
16 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Declared Extinct, the Yaghan Rise in the Land of Fire
by Jude Isabella • The Indigenous people of Tierra del Fuego were once relegated to historical oblivion. Now, archaeologists are helping them pursue deeper stories about their ancestors. The visually stunning original story can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-04-05
52 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Landfill of the Future
by Andrea McGuire • Taking inspiration from science fiction, a small company on the Island of Newfoundland aims to revolutionize what we do with garbage. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-03-29
22 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: The Future of Castro’s Crocs
by Shanna Baker • As a breeding facility works to retain a pure lineage of the Cuban crocodile, out in the wild the division between species is getting murkier all the time. Originally published in June 2018, the story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-03-22
23 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: A Fish Called Rockweed
by Ben Goldfarb • In Maine, a strange legal debate is raging over rights to the state’s most important seaweed. Originally published in May 2018, the story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-03-15
18 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Clever Whales and the Violent Fight for Fish on the Line
by Nick Rahaim • As a commercial fisher, I’ve watched colleagues shoot at whales looting from their lines. Here’s why everyone loses when that happens. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-03-08
29 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Catching Crabs in a Suffocating Sea
by Julia Rosen • When oceans are starved of oxygen, it can be devastating to crabs and the fishers who rely on them. New tools could help crabbers sidestep dead zones. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-03-01
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Will Exporting Farmed Totoaba Fix the Big Mess Pushing the World’s Most Endangered Porpoise to Extinction?
by Victor R. Rodríguez • International officials will soon decide the fate of Mexican totoaba fish farming—and with it, possibly the last glimmer of hope for the vaquita. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-02-22
15 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Whales in the Cliff Face
by Devon Bidal • An exposed prehistoric seafloor is a hotspot for ancient whale remains, and now an international team is helping unravel their mysteries. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-02-15
27 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
As African Penguins Go Hungry, a Debate Rages in South Africa: Who Gets the Fish?
by Tommy Trenchard • They’ve been robbed of eggs and guano, soaked in oil, and stung by killer bees—now a dispute about numbers could clinch their future. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-02-07
30 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: The Social Lives of Octopuses
Octopuses are some of the ocean’s most enigmatic creatures. Highly intelligent, curious, playful, and, as more and more research is showing, sometimes social. But although we’re witnessing more instances of octopuses interacting with one another—sharing dens, cooperatively hunting, or gathering in large numbers—can they form social bonds with humans? If an octopus seems to reach out to touch us, is it making a connection or just exploring the strange thing in front of it? In this special episode Hakai Magazine managing editor Adrienne Mason and guests discuss how octopuses perceive their environments, the current...
2022-02-03
55 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Kelp Gets on the Carbon-Credit Bandwagon
by Nicola Jones • Is there potential for seaweeds to help solve the climate crisis? The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-02-01
17 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Training the Polar Bear Patrol
by Eva Holland • A grassroots guard learns how to keep people and polar bears safe in a small Arctic community. Originally published in May 2018, the story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-01-25
13 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Holy Mackerel, Where’d You Go?
by Moira Donovan • A beloved fish with a rich history has become hard to find—will it rise again? The original story, along with photos and videos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-01-18
21 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Can We Really Be Friends with an Octopus?
by Ferris Jabr • When octopuses are social, are they reaching out or simply reacting? The original story, along with photos and videos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-01-11
28 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Oil Rigs Are a Refuge in a Dying Sea
by Sasha Chapman • Our reliance on fossil fuels is harming marine ecosystems—but the platforms we use to extract oil are giving marine life new homes. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2022-01-04
38 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
A Key Tool for Cleaning Up Oil Spills Is More Hazardous Than Helpful
by Ryan Stuart • In the decade since the record-breaking use of oil dispersants in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill response, science shows they’re dangerous, potentially deadly, and rarely useful. A new court case is forcing the US EPA to reconsider their use. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-12-14
14 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Bonus Episode: Deep-Sea Mining Demystified
Determining the future of deep-sea mining has become a pressing issue for global society. What we do in the watery depths has direct implications for climate change, technology, marine life, and the financial autonomy of some island nations. If you’ve heard a little buzz about the topic but aren’t clear on the details, this online event is for you. In this special episode, join Hakai Magazine news editor Colin Schultz and expert panelists John Jamieson, the Canada Research Chair on marine geology; Klaas Willaert, an expert on the law of the sea and a member of B...
2021-12-11
1h 24
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Alaska’s Absent Snowy Owls
by Kylie Mohr • The only reliable snowy owl breeding site in the United States has a conspicuous shortage of owls. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-12-07
17 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
My Family’s Pacific Island Home Is Grappling with Deep-Sea Mining
by Rachel Reeves • Here’s what I’ve learned being up close and personal with the debate. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-11-30
29 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Checkpoints, Machine Guns, and Fences: This Pakistani Port Is Not for the People
by Samira Shackle • A massive port project—part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative—is more military base than port, further disenfranchising people in a region with a history of political tension and violence. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-11-23
19 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: When Mountains Fall into the Sea
by Tyee Bridge • As glaciers melt, unstable slopes are being exposed and are on the precipice of collapse. Originally published in May 2018, the story, along with photos and videos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-11-16
19 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
What Whale Barnacles Know
by Mara Grunbaum • For generations, these hitchhikers have been recording details about their hosts and their ocean home. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-11-09
28 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: The Local-Carb Diet
by Madeline Ostrander • Dedicated Pacific Northwest plant lovers nurture an indigenous food with ancient roots. Originally published in April 2018, the story, along with photos and videos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-11-02
26 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Are We on the Verge of Chatting with Whales?
by Christoph Droesser • An ambitious project is attempting to interpret sperm whale clicks with artificial intelligence, then talk back to them. The original story, along with photos and illustrations, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-10-26
18 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Stitching Hope
by Kamala Thiagarajan • In the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami, a simple doll became a powerful symbol of healing in coastal India and beyond. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-10-19
19 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Defenders of the Forgotten Fish
by Ben Goldfarb • Tribes of the Columbia River watershed are hustling to keep the Pacific lamprey alive, one fish at a time. Originally published in July 2015, the story, along with photos and videos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-10-12
19 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Raising Baby Sharks from the Dead
by Claudia Geib • Biologists are rescuing baby sharks and skates from recently caught females, giving the unborn a chance at survival. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-10-05
29 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Surrogacy Across Species
by Chloe Williams • Scientists can now borrow the bodies of one fish species to produce another—whether they should, though, is an open question. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-09-28
17 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Scooping Plastic Out of the Ocean Is a Losing Game
by Ryan Stuart • Open ocean cleanups won’t solve the marine plastics crisis. To really make a difference, here’s what we should do instead. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-09-21
20 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Flying by the Fat of the Sea
by Amorina Kingdon • Scientists may have cracked an essential secret of shorebirds’ marathon migrations. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-09-14
35 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: The Mysterious Disappearance of Keith Davis
by Sarah Tory • The unsettling disappearance of a fisheries observer sparks questions about safety on the high seas and the fate of the fish stocks observers attempt to monitor. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-09-07
32 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
A Cancer-Quashing Microbe Emerges from the Deep
by Stephanie Stone • A species of marine bacteria shows promise for curing a nasty brain cancer. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-08-31
32 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
How Ancient Rome’s 1% Hijacked the Beach
by Heather Pringle • The rich, the poor, and the battle for the Bay of Naples. The original story, along with photos and illustrations, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-08-24
17 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Why We Can’t Shake Ambergris
by Mark Wilding • The odd, enduring appeal of a scarce commodity few people use and no one really needs. The original story, along with illustrations, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-08-17
25 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: The Long, Knotty, World-Spanning Story of String
by Ferris Jabr • String is far more important than the wheel in the pantheon of inventions. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-08-10
19 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Ingenious Ancient Technology Concealed in the Shallows
by Brian Payton • Fish traps have a long history around the world, and a vast network in a Vancouver Island estuary reveals generations of ecological wisdom. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-08-03
24 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Rebroadcast: Lord of the ’Rhynchs
by Adrienne Mason • There and back again: a taxonomist’s quest to reveal the world’s tiniest realms. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-07-27
26 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Hard Sell of Whale Sanctuaries
by Matthew Halliday • As aquariums end captive-whale programs, advocates seek to build ocean-based retirement homes for the animals—but finding the right host community is a feat. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-07-20
30 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
In Goa, the Water Runs Black
by Disha Shetty • Locals near one of India’s coal-importing ports feel the effects of coal dust and are bracing for an even unhealthier future. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-07-13
16 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Survivor: Salmon Edition
by Brandon Wei • Will different salmon species adapt before the climate votes them off the island? The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-07-06
32 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Birdopolis Webinar: Coastal Birds at Home in the City
This is a special episode of the Hakai Magazine Audio Edition. Researchers Louise Blight and Ed Kroc discuss the lives of gulls in urban environments along with managing editor Adrienne Mason. The conversation was recorded during the webinar called ‘Birdopolis: Coastal Birds at Home in the City’ on June 29, 2021.
2021-06-30
59 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Birdopolis, Part 3 of 3: The City, the Sparrow, and the Tempestuous Sea
by Joseph Quaderer • The saltmarsh sparrow survives the rattle and roar of one of North America’s most populated areas, but its greatest challenge comes from the sea. This article is part of Birdopolis, a three-part series that explores the lives of birds that are, by accident or design, spending more time in urban environments. The other stories are “The Gull Next Door” and “Honolulu: A Seabird’s Surprising Five Star Destination”. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-06-24
26 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Birdopolis Part 2 of 3: Honolulu: A Seabird’s Surprising Five-Star Destination
by Joe Spring • The white tern—Manu-o-Kū—has excited ornithologists, its population growing within the busiest of Hawai‘i’s urban landscapes. This article is part of Birdopolis, a three-part series that explores the lives of birds that are, by accident or design, spending more time in urban environments. The other stories are “The Gull Next Door” and “The City, the Sparrow, and the Tempestuous Sea”. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-06-23
22 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Birdopolis Part 1 of 3: The Gull Next Door
by Sarah Keartes • Your obnoxious neighbor or just a misunderstood, displaced seabird? This article is part of Birdopolis, a three-part series that explores the lives of birds that are, by accident or design, spending more time in urban environments. The other stories are “Honolulu: A Seabird’s Surprising Five Star Destination” and “The City, the Sparrow, and the Tempestuous Sea”. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-06-22
22 min
The Forgotten
The Forgotten CCLXIX: Hakai
TF #269: Hakai (@blush-response & Jagoda Nagel) The Forgotten is pleased to introduce Hakai in the 269th episode. It is a project conformed by Jagoda Nagel & Blush Response, focused on noise-techno and industrial rhythms with sci-fi nuances and it's inspired by their mutual love for Japanese culture and aesthetics. They recently released a remix EP titled "Flesh Reconstruct" via Megastructure_. Tracklist: Hakai - Anxiety [Christina Sealey Remix] - MEGASTRUCTURE_ Unhuman + Surit - Impact Bashing - Black Sun Records Ansome - Copper - Perc Trax Beau Wanzer - Non Human Headlock - Ophism Hakai - Ningen [Phase Fatale Remix] - Megastructure_ Konkurs...
2021-06-19
58 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Freeing Oysters from a Parasite’s Hold
by Karen Pinchin • Armed with traditional knowledge and modern science, a small team hunts for the sweet spot that could save oysters from a parasite that has decimated populations in Cape Breton and beyond. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-06-15
12 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Hawai‘i’s Last Outlaw Hippies (Rebroadcast)
by Brendan Borrell • After half a century, the counterculture squatters of Kalalau Valley are facing a final eviction. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-06-08
33 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
The Trees That Sail to Sea (Rebroadcast)
by Brian Payton • In one of nature’s remarkable second acts, dead trees become driftwood and embark on transformative journeys. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-06-01
25 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Introducing the Sound Aquatic
Listen to the first episode of The Sound Aquatic, a new five-part Hakai Magazine podcast that invites you to hear the ocean like never before. Then subscribe to the miniseries through your favorite podcast app.
2021-05-25
23 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Hitchhiking with Bloodworms
by Peter Andrey Smith • Invasive species are sneaking around the world, nestled in the seaweed used to ship bait worms. An easy solution exists, but the industry is resisting change. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-05-18
15 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
That Time Hitler’s Girlfriend Visited Iceland and the British Invaded
by Egill Bjarnason • The location of this small island nation, along with its people and economy, played an unexpected and crucial role in the outcome of the Second World War. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-05-11
32 min
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Making Amends with Makatea
by Jennifer Kingsley • On this French Polynesian island dramatically scarred from mining, locals grapple with whether a new mine will heal or harm the landscape. The original story, along with photos and video, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
2021-05-04
21 min
60 Card Bricks: A Yu-Gi-Oh Podcast
Hakai? More Like... Ha"Cry"
Hakai? More Like... Ha"Cry" by Carlos & Ty --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/60cardbricks/support
2019-10-08
1h 14
Hakai Magazine Audio Edition
Introducing: The Ballast Podcast
This week we bring you something slightly different: the first episode of Hakai Magazine's first podcast! Did you know ship ballast from the United Kingdom built Manhattan? Or some of it. This was one of the enticing tidbits that got us very interested in ballast and we decided to delve in. A podcast on ballast? Sure, why not! If you like what you hear, subscribe to Ballast wherever you listen to podcasts. You can learn more about the Ballast podcast at hakaimagazine.com/ballast-podcast/.
2019-09-17
18 min