The Discover Life in America Podcast brings you into natural wonders of GSMNP through conversations with the experts. We interview park biologists, resource managers and other researchers to get the latest on all things related to science in the Smokies and the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory. I am Jaimie Matzko, host and Biodiversity Program Specialist with DLiA. We are the science partner of GSMNP and nonprofit organization, founded 25 years ago to find and record every species in the park. Thanks for listening.
In closing our 25th Anniversary year of the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI), Discover Life in America Podcast host, Jaimie Matzko, talks to Keith Langdon, retired GSMNP Supervisory Biologist, also known as the “Father of the ATBI” to find out what it like to start such an ambitious project.
The Smokies ATBI, a project that Discover Life in America manages in partnership with GSMNP, seeks to catalog the estimated 60,000-80,000 species of living organisms in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. A brainchild of renowned ecologist Dan Janzen, the first ATBI was supposed to take place in the rainforests of northwest Costa Rica. Due to bureaucratic difficulties, however, the location was changed to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
The idea behind an All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI) is simple. If we want to be good stewards of our environment and keep the world around us healthy and vibrant, we need to understand the web of biodiversity. The information we need—how many species live in an environment, what jobs these species do and how they interact with each other—is largely unknown.
Learn more at dlia.org.
Pictured from left are:
•Keith Langdon, retired Supervisory Biologist for GSMNP, also known as the “father of the ATBI”
•DLiA Executive Director, Todd Witcher
•E.O. Wilson (June 10, 1929 – December 26, 2021) “pioneer of evolutionary biology,” entomologist, naturalist and Pulitzer Prize winning author
•Hal Mahan (June 11, 1931-August 21, 2021) Acclaimed naturalist and co-founder of The Compleat Naturalist
Did you know that there are 19 species of fireflies in GSMNP? How do they determine when the peak will be for the synchronous firefly event in Elkmont so far ahead of time? How much do we actually know about fireflies? Tune in to learn more about fireflies in the Smokies.