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A shark expert discusses how to safely enjoy ocean swimming while avoiding encounters, noting tracking technology has increased awareness of sharks in coastal waters.
On the same day as the Nantucket incident, a 40-year-old surfer named Matthew Bender of Winter Park, Florida, was attacked by ...
Santa Barbara’s own Forrest Galante has dedicated his life to wildlife biology, which led him in 2018 to host Animal Planet’s series “Extinct or Alive” during which he travels the world ...
Alligators, bears, hippos and more animals are getting messed up on a bunch of different substances ... and, a few intrepid ...
Forrest Galante is the wildlife biologist and conservationist the world needs right now. He’s engaging, he builds his conservation work on a solid foundation of science, and he truly loves all ...
Forrest Galante is a familiar face for Shark Week fans, and his search for "alien sharks" resulted in some fascinating finds like footage of pyjama sharks mating, sevengills thriving in an ...
We like Animal Planet star Forrest Galante a lot around these parts. We’ve profiled him, featured his writing, and even gotten him publicly buzzed. All for one simple reason: We believe in his ...
Biologist Forrest Galante captures some of the first footage of a walking shark in Papua New Guinea in the Shark Week 2022 special Island of the Walking Sharks. By. Kelli Bender.
For Forrest Galante, this is an animal he has been thinking about for years. The biologist turned adventurer is the star of Animal Planet’s Extinct or Alive , a nature show that seeks out ...
Forrest Galante’s book “STILL ALIVE: A Wild Life of Rediscovery,” available to purchase on June 1, takes readers on an exhilarating journey to the most remote and dangerous corners of the world.
ARCADIA, Calif. — Biologist Forrest Galante’s family lived in Zimbabwe until political turmoil forced them to flee to the United States. But his childhood fascination with exotic animals remained.
Why you should watch it: Friend of the RAF column Forrest Galante travels to Papua New Guinea to prove that sharks are evolving to walk on land. I’ve seen a clip from this episode.