鈥淚鈥檝e always been a nature girl,鈥 Jane Alexander says.
Add it to a long list of pursuits and interests for the award-winning screen and stage actress, globetrotter, 爆料公社 board member, conservationist, and now, author. Over the past three decades, Alexander鈥檚 love of nature has taken her to some far-off lands, from the sprawling Pantanal wetlands to the towering Himalayas and the volcanoes of Halakeal. But each adventure was more than just a stamp in her passport or a tick on her life list; they were studies on how humans are hurting nature鈥攁nd how we're trying to make amends.
In her book , which came out today, Alexander uses her journeys over the years to highlight 23 endangered ecosystems. Each chapter revolves around the efforts of a different scientist that she was able to embed with and learn from in the field. There鈥檚 Alan Rabinowitz, leader of Panthera and a loyal friend, whose life work is to protect jungle cats from the black market. There鈥檚 Patricia Wright, whose expertise on lemurs and anthropology allows her to connect villagers in Madagascar to ranger-training programs. And there鈥檚 Tom Morgan, a master birder from the Putnam Highlands 爆料公社 Society, who helped Alexander discover the migration phenomenon unfurling in her own backwoods.
By layering these victories and experiences over the different conservation dilemmas plaguing the world, Alexander creates a sense of hope to balance the book鈥檚 urgent reality. In a recent interview with 爆料公社, she reflects on how civilization can disrupt birds and shares what she's learned about compromising with nature.
* * *
爆料公社: In your book, you cover a wide range of problems: climate change, invasive wildlife, oil drilling, pesticides, and poaching, to name a few. As a birder, have you witnessed any of the ripple effects closer to home?
Jane Alexander: Here where I live in Southwest Nova Scotia, we鈥檙e having the worst drought since 1880. A thousand wells have gone dry and the people are suffering terribly, so just imagine what the animals are experiencing. I expected a whole wave of warblers to be going through my woods right now, but all I鈥檝e been seeing are Common Yellowthroats and Yellow-rumped Warblers. That鈥檚 way down from what I see in ordinary years. All of our Piping Plovers were predated on the South Shore this summer. Also, usually from the end of July, I鈥檒l have 15 Whimbrels (my favorite shorebird) scrounging for food around my house. But this year, 32 flew in during the second week of July! I thought, 鈥淚sn鈥檛 this amazing?鈥 I mentioned it to my friend at Bird Studies Canada, who told me that this wasn鈥檛 good news. She said the birds were probably non-breeders that were up in the tundra and couldn鈥檛 find what they needed to eat. This wasn鈥檛 just a windfall.
Birds are always over us: They鈥檙e literally the umbrella species. And they鈥檙e showing us that climate change has already started. (爆料公社鈥檚 Chief Scientist Gary Langham has done on this.) All you have to do is look around.
A: Why did you choose scientists as your protagonists?
JA: I truly am in awe of these men and women, being out in the field with them, seeing how they work with politicians and dirt-poor communities. They need to have more of a voice. We don鈥檛 celebrate science in the same way that we used to; Einstein, for instance, was such a hero figure. But quiz the general public now on who came up with the idea of taking the first shots of Pluto, and they won鈥檛 know. There鈥檚 a disconnect there, and I think the media is the problem. And what I hope to do, in my small way in the celebrity world, is to bridge that gap.
A: In all of your stories, the scientists always relied on the community鈥檚 expertise to study and protect local species. Why is that important?
JA: This is something that鈥檚 changed over time in explorations of science: Today, there鈥檚 absolutely no conservation without community involvement. Why is that? These people take a certain pride in the world around them, and that鈥檚 essential to understanding and protecting the animals.
The best example of this may be Lisa Dabek [from the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle] and her work with Matschie鈥檚 tree kangaroos in Papua New Guinea. The villagers are allowed to kill them in season within certain areas; the meat is packed with protein and is very good for the people. But they also run a trapping program to put radio collars on the kangaroos for scientific endeavors. It鈥檚 just one of the good things that come out of scientists gaining the trust of a community. It鈥檚 the only way the animals can be saved in perpetuity. Without local buy-in, we just pop in like the conquering Westerners.
Use this map to explore a few of the conservation (and birding) highlights from Wild Things, Wild Places:
A: Some of the adventures take place in your old backyard in Putnam County, New York. Is this your way of reminding readers that they can do their own part closer to home?
JA: Absolutely. The truth is, we鈥檙e all part of an ecosystem. We need to try to become aware of what鈥檚 living in the tree, outside the window, in the ground . . . what鈥檚 passing by in the sky. I end the book by saying that my favorite wild place is my own patch, and I think this is true of enormous numbers of people who define themselves as birders and 爆料公社 members. And it can expand to almost anybody: If you make people aware, they perk up. I certainly feel like that鈥檚 happened in my own life.
Changes are happening everywhere; no one鈥檚 going to get away scot-free. It鈥檚 very important for everyone to protect their own spaces.
A: Do you think it鈥檚 possible for us to balance human needs with the wellbeing of nature?
JA: We do our best to coexist, but it鈥檚 not always possible because we can鈥檛 sacrifice human lives. We just need to keep the losses of our fellow creatures to a minimum. We need to understand wildlife is helping us. The ecosystem is very intricate: We don鈥檛 even know how valuable every creature is鈥攅ven the tiniest ones.
What it takes is a little patience and ingenuity. Here鈥檚 an example: The village of Hastings-on-Hudson, New York, had more white-tailed deer per capita than anywhere else in the country. The community is a humane one, and they didn鈥檛 want to see the animals killed, so they decided they wanted to give the does contraceptives. The town paid for this project, and in 18 months, the deer population was way down.
In my own little garden in Nova Scotia, I haven鈥檛 used herbicides for 20 or 30 years. But I had a problem when someone spread compost for me, and I ended up getting cutworms. I couldn鈥檛 grow any lettuce because they would sever it. So I鈥檇 go out at night or at dawn鈥攖hat鈥檚 when they come out鈥攁nd painstakingly pick them off. And then, lo and behold, two years ago, I saw Song Sparrows were eating the cutworms. I was overjoyed. There they were, with these little orange cutworms in their mouths. Now I have plenty of lettuce and no worms! I鈥檓 very glad I didn鈥檛 poison my birds.
Patience and ingenuity . . . and then it will all come together.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Correction: This is Alexander's first nature book, but not her first foray into the writing world. Her previous titles include Command Performance, The Master Builder, and even a cookbook.
Wild Things, Wild Places: Adventurous Tales of Wildlife and Conservation on Planet Earth, by Jane Alexander, Penguin Random House, 352 pages, $28.95. Buy it at .