Up Next
Back to Show
Earth Focus
Building a Future: Scientists Build Lumber Library to Identify Poached Wood
With rare wood being used for furniture, wood instruments and other high-end consumer products, illegal logging is the third-largest transnational crime. In the Northwest United States, scientists and citizens are collaborating to stop illegal lumber from entering the country. At the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Forensics laboratory, experts are building a database — or wood library — with a goal of identifying timber crimes, victims and suspects at a local, federal and international level.
Support Provided By
Season
26:40
Diablo Canyon ignites conversations about nuclear power in the state’s energy future.
26:40
Love for Joshua Tree endangers the local life—both people and ecosystems.
26:40
Ravens threaten Mojave Desert tortoises, and solutions call on shifts in human behavior.
26:40
A transformed L.A. River is envisioned by the communities that live at its edge.
26:40
The L.A. River is reimagined through explorations of history, hydrology, and architecture.
26:47
Everyday people are standing up against the e-commerce giants polluting the Inland Empire.
56:40
Climate change takes a toll on mental health in rural areas.
56:41
Stories of patients and doctors reveal the environmental determinants of health in South Gate, CA.
26:40
A look at the Peruvian government's Operation Mercury, a decisive action to shut down an entire town built around an illegal gold mine.
26:39
South Africa faces a stark reality as the continent’s largest greenhouse gas emitter.
26:39
In-depth profiles of four young environmentalists: Alexandria Villaseñor in California, Carl Smith in Alaska, Ayakha Melithafa in South Africa and Litokne Kabua in the Marshall Islands.
26:40
Entire aquatic ecosystems are beginning to collapse.