On this episode of Mongabay’s weekly podcast, we look at nature through the lens of wildlife photographer and senior marketing associate at Mongabay, Alejandro Prescott-Cornejo, the multilingual staffer charged with sharing the team’s reporting and mission with the world.
Prescott-Cornejo details how his work with Mongabay intersects with his passion for wildlife photography, what makes a good photo, and how anyone can connect with nature by getting to know their own “local patch.”
“There are so many beautiful things, whether big or small, that can be very, very close to you — and you don't need to go photograph the biggest animals, just photograph what's close,” he says.
His photography — along with images created by three of his colleagues, including Mongabay founder and CEO Rhett A. Butler — is currently on display at an exhibition at the Linden Street Gallery near Boston. The show’s theme of “Biophilia,” which celebrates humanity's love for nature, also refers to Mongabay’s recent receipt of the Biophilia Award for Environmental Communication, and is on view until Nov. 4, 2025.
Readers and podcast listeners are invited to showcase their own wildlife photography by entering Mongabay’s “Wildlife Wonders” photo contest: starting on Oct. 1, just post your best wildlife image at Instagram and tag it with #MongabayWildlifeWonders and @mongabay in the description for a chance to be featured. The contest will accept entries until Oct. 22.
Find the Mongabay Newscast wherever you listen to podcasts, from Apple to Spotify. All past episodes are also listed here at the Mongabay website.
Image Credit: Mountain gorillas by Alejandro Prescott-Cornejo for Mongabay.
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Timecodes
(00:00) Alejandro’s connection with multiple languages
(07:27) Why Alejandro finds healing in nature
(12:59) Get to know your “local patch”
(19:37) Ethical concerns of photography
(24:34) What makes a good photo?
(29:58) Alejandro’s work for Mongabay
(32:50) The Biophilia exhibit, and visiting a gorllia
(41:32) Alejandro’s favorite landscape
In a yearlong investigation from The New Humanitarian and Mongabay, spanning multiple countries, investigative reporters found the United Nations is not climate neutral as it claims to be.
The UN bases much of its claims on the use of carbon credits--which are already increasingly criticized by experts as having little impact on actually offsetting emissions.
Reporters found that many projects that issue carbon credits to the U.N. were linked to environmental damage or displacement, and 2.7 million out of 6.6 million credits were linked to wind or hydropower — which experts say don’t represent true emissions reductions.
Joining the podcast to explain these findings is investigative reporter Jacob Goldberg from The New Humanitarian.
Related reading:
Revealed: Why the UN is not climate neutral
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Episode artwork: More than half of the UN carbon offsets come from high-risk projects. Image by JuergenPM via Pixabay (Public domain).
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