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Tate’s Hell & the Apalachicola River Delta |...
Kayak Scouting Mission on the Ochlockonee Water Trail
Merritt’s Mill Pond | Kayaking and Spring Caves

The WFSU Ecology Blog

  • Home
    • About
    • EcoAdventures
      • Kayak and Canoe Adventures
      • Hiking
      • Wildlife Watching
    • Observations From the Field
      • White Pelicans Visit Dr. Charles L. Evans Pond in Tallahassee
      • An April Walk at Ochlockonee River WMA
      • Nesting Raptors at Honeymoon Island State Park
    • WFSU Public Media Home
  • Documentaries
    • EcoCitizen Show | Seasons in South Tallahassee
    • Red Wolf Family Celebrates First Year at the Tallahassee Museum
    • Roaming the Red Hills
    • Oyster Doctors
    • Testing the Ecology of Fear
    • EcoShakespeare
    • Stories from the Apalachicola
    • Classic WFSU Ecology Documentaries
  • Habitats
    • Estuaries
      • Oyster Reef
        • The Effects of Predators and Fear on Oyster Reefs
        • Apalachicola Oyster Research
        • Animal Species in a North Florida Intertidal Oyster Reef
        • Oyster Reef Ecology | On the Reef
      • Salt Marsh
        • In the Grass- Salt Marsh Biodiversity Study
        • Plants and Animals of a North Florida Salt Marsh
        • Salt Marsh Ecology | In the Grass
      • Seagrass Bed
        • Predatory Snails, and Prey, of the Bay Mouth Bar Seagrass Beds
      • In the Grass, On the Reef Glossary
    • Waterways Big and Small
      • Aucilla/ Wacissa Watershed
      • Apalachicola Basin
        • Apalachicola Bluffs and Ravines | Virtual Field Trip
        • The Age of Nature Screening & Discussion | The Future of the Apalachicola
        • Apalachicola River and Bay
        • Apalachicola RiverTrek | Kayaking, Camping, & Hiking the River Basin
    • Longleaf Pine & Fire Ecology
  • Backyard Habitat
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      • The Backyard Bug Blog 2018
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    • Backyard Flora and Fauna
      • Bees of North Florida and South Georgia
      • The Seasonality of Bees (and Bee Plants) in North Florida
      • Woody Vines of North Florida
      • Flies of North Florida are More Diverse than You’d Think
      • The Case for Weeds, Our Unsung Florida Native Plants
      • Devil’s Walkingstick: Your New Favorite Thorny Pollinator Plant?
      • Florida Native Milkweed | Tips for Growing Your Monarch Friendly Garden
      • Mistletoe | A Parasite for the Holidays (But Maybe We Like it Anyway?)
    • Florida Friendly Seasonal Planting Guide
    • Pollinator and Gardening Posts
    • Gardening Web Resources

FSU experts talk climate change and property insurance as part of Hurricane Preparedness Week

by May 5, 2022
by May 5, 2022 0 comment

It’s National Hurricane Preparedness Week, and faculty at Florida State University are offering insights. They say the hurricane risk to Florida is increasing because of population growth and uncertainties from climate change.

Allison Wing, Associate Professor of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science, says climate change doesn’t necessarily affect the number of tropical systems in a given year.

“But climate change is increasing our risk from hurricanes in other ways. We’ve observed that hurricanes are getting stronger,” Wing says. “We expect that the hurricanes will continue to intensify, especially with an increase in the number and intensity of the strongest storms – those category 4 and 5 storms.”

Hurricane season is looming as the Florida Legislature prepares for a special session later this month on the state’s troubled property insurance market.

Charles Nyce, Associate Professor of Risk Management and Insurance, says lawmakers need to act quickly to tackle what he calls “the fraud balloon”

“What we’ve done is we’ve kind of squeezed in one area and it pops out somewhere else,” says Nyce, noting the legislature has been trying for years to tackle skyrocketing insurance fraud in Florida, with bad claims ranging from storm damage to sinkholes to roofing issues.

Now, it’s also a matter of making sure property insurance policies will fully cover potential losses. “Construction costs are really high in the state. If you bought a policy a few years ago and you have a 2,000 square foot house and you think it’s going to cost $100 a square foot to fix it, that’s not the case anymore,” Nyce says. “Make sure your policy limits are high enough to cover how much damage you could potentially have.”

Hurricane Season is June 1st through November 30th. Forecasters are predicting an above-normal season with nine hurricanes, four of them major.

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  • Florida’s annual Lionfish Challenge opens today
  • Blue-green algae found in Lake Munson is dangerous for humans and pets
  • FSU experts talk climate change and property insurance as part of Hurricane Preparedness Week
  • Florida will expand alligator hunting hours to 24/7 when the season opens in August
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iNaturalist

iNaturalist became a part of the WFSU Ecology Blog during the EcoCitizen Project in 2019.  Since then, we’ve used it to help identify the many plants and animals we see on our shoots.  And on the Backyard Blog, we show how it can be used to identify weeds and garden insects, to help figure out what’s beneficial or a possible pest.  Below is the iNaturalist profile belonging to WFSU Ecology producer Rob Diaz de Villegas.

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My Garden of a Thousand Bees | NOW STREAMING

PBS Nature: My Garden of a Thousand Bees

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My Garden of a Thousand Bees features renowned wildlife filmmaker Martin Dohrn, who, with the world in lockdown during the summer of 2020, turned his exceptional macrophotography filmmaking skills on his own tiny backyard and the surprising number of wild bee species that live there.

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