@Grizzli49

Ann Jones is a national treasure!

@sarahmacintosh6449

I thought I hallucinated this earlier! I'm glad you re-uploaded it ๐ŸŽ‰

@daina12000

Great video,  Thank you. ๐Ÿ˜€๐Ÿ™ƒ๐Ÿ˜Š๐ŸŒฟ

@sarahmacintosh6449

That was truly fascinating, thanks!

@Dalaruan

Great video! As a Northern European I'm always amazed by your flora & fauna. Keep up the good work!

@robinmoreno1066

Oh thank you so much for this segment. It is fabulous and fascinating!

@JackKinross

Superb.  Fantastic to see Australia making these great efforts.

@maxwellhowig510

Loved the platypus and pygmy possum section, adorbs.  Also HEY, they let Ann out of the studio again ๐Ÿ™‚ !

@penelopeeee8348

that insect collection is so cool!

@jonathanm9436

Well, THAT was super interesting! Love your work Ann (and team).

8000 hectares. What type of football?  8.9km by 8.9km pest-free - better than nothing I suppose.


I wonder about the quality of the ecosystem within the protected area. Is it complete, partially complete, biased towards some species over others? Interesting.



Wouldn't it be wonderful if science was funded better than car parks.

@LocalUrbanLegend

I love this documentary because it explicitly explores the solutions as well as the problems; so many nature documentaries talk about the tragic and horrific problems these ecosystems and all their precious creatures face, then either give a vague and very overwhelming suggestion that we take action to protect them, or give us no actionable information at all--and on top of that, never clearly or deeply discussing the strides we are making, the specific work that has been done, and how this work will continue to be done. I think many people who care very deeply about these issues feel very hopeless and powerless a lot of the time, and these sort of concrete demonstrations of positive changes/advances in the field alongside being honest and confronting the reality of the climate crisis is incredibly helpful--knowledge is power, but so is hope, guidance, and empowerment. Thank you so much for all the content this channel does, and keep up the good work! Cheers๐Ÿ–คโœจ

@jaxr2958

Aussies adopt, fund, care for and cherish non native pets.  We can't adopt native mammals.  I'd love to see some research into what would happen if we started allowing people to have native animals as part of their backyard ecosystem. And whether the survival of some of these threatened species could be enhanced by allowing private breeding.

@bartwilson2513

Um...I want a whole documentary on whatever the heck this is: 30:50

@sheriegraham5908

I love your energy and enthusiasm. You make teaching look awesome. โค Love, Nana Sherie.

@wombat.6652

Great work.  Thank you.

@sheriegraham5908

Awesome as always. Thank you so much. You are still my favorite. โค

@MstresVampy

Ok low key the last chapter in this ๐Ÿ˜ฎ but im surprised  they arent gathering eggs n sperm yet on these said specific species...i get we have the dna but we need eggs n sperm too for a good genetic pool. Hunan,horses n many other do for breeding

@liln7906

Coloniser chronicles: how to continue colonising and make it seem progressive and legitimate