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Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty Nine! And I hope you all remain safe and healthy as we move towards May, a busy time for herps and herp lovers in many places across the planet.
PATREONERS! Here’s a shout-out to new supporters Martin Habecker and Daniel Dye! Thank you so much for supporting the show, and thanks as always to all of the folks who help keep the show going. To others in the listening audience, if you like the show, please consider supporting it via the So Much Pingle Patreon page. You can also support the show via one-time contributions via PayPal or Venmo (please contact me via email to somuchpingle@gmail.com).
In this episode, we talk with Ross Maynard about the Rio Mandiriacu Reserve, up in the mountains of northwestern Ecuador. Now this conversation with Ross hits a lot of marks for me – new species of amphibians, conservation work, and adventure travel in foreign lands, and I hope you enjoy it as well as I did. Ross works for the Biodiversity Group and he and other members are actively engaged in preserving critical habitat for many poorly known and endangered species in Ecuador. See the photo gallery below for more images of the reserve, as well as some of the amphibians mentioned on the show, including Rhaebo ollalai and Nymphargus mandiriacu.
I encourage all of my listeners to help the Rio Mandiriacu Reserve project if possible. You can learn more about the Biodiversity Group here, and you can make direct donations as well.
There is also The Biodiversity Group conservation swag & art shop on Etsy (all products made by Nathalie Aall to raise funds for TBG research efforts), and you can also check out Nathalie’s personal Etsy store for more cool art.
Another way you can contribute is via Cameras for Conservation (for donations of functional cameras and other field equipment for reserve staff and local community members)
Also, be sure to check out Fundación EcoMinga, the NGO that manages the Río Manduriacu Reserve. EcoMinga’s pages highlight plants and animals from protected reserves, many of them new species, and you get a good idea of what’s at stake here. Also see Fundación Condor Andino, the NGO that Sebastian Kohn founded and operates (the original land owner of the Manduriacu Reserve–he is responsible for initiating the research and protection of the reserve).
Thanks for listening everyone! And as always, please keep the comments and suggestions coming, and please take time to rate the show on your podcast platform! The show email is somuchpingle@gmail.com, and there’s also a So Much Pingle group on Facebook, for discussion, comments, feedback, suggestions, herp confessions, Yaqui origin stories, tips for herping better, etc.
Cheers! Mike





Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty Eight of the SMP show! I hope you all remain safe and healthy, and it’s great to be back after a few weeks off. I was not idle during that time, I was out in the field for 21 days, and I recorded material for several shows during that time, including this one.
Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty Seven! I hope you all remain safe and healthy and hopefully many of you are getting your vaccine doses. Spring is here where I live and I managed to get the intros and outros recorded for this episode despite a trio of chainsaws working on a tree in the neighbor’s yard. Tricky timing but done.
Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty Six! I hope everyone remains happy and healthy as we move into spring here in the northern hemisphere. It is a wild and wooly day out today here in central Illinois, with high winds and freezing rain, but spring will not be denied.
Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty Five! Apologies for the delay, thanks for your patience, and much warmth and good wishes to everyone.
Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty Four! Here’s a shout-out to all of the people in Texas, I hope today finds you recovering from the terrible weather last week. Much warmth and good wishes to everyone.
Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty Three! The polar vortex continues here in east-central Illinois, the mercury is pooled at the bottom of the thermometer, so put on a sweatshirt, make yourself a cuppa, and pull up a piping hot episode about frogs! Our guest this week is Jodi Rowley, a conservation biologist with the Australian Museum in Sydney. Jodi has been involved with frog field research in Australia, Cambodia, Vietnam, and other places, and she is also involved with a very cool community science project called FrogID.
Hello everyone and welcome to Episode Thirty One, recorded on New Year’s Day! And I hope you all remain happy and healthy and that 2021 will be a good year for all of you.
Hello again everyone, and welcome to Episode Thirty! Today’s episode was recorded just before Christmas. And I hope you are all doing well – keeping your heads down and remaining healthy.