‘Namib’ derives from the Nama language, meaning “an area where there is nothing.” This vast region extends for 1,200 miles along the Atlantic coast—from...
Megan Brief is a multimedia storyteller and science communicator. She holds a Master of Arts in Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies from the Rhode Island School of Design, where her research on the illegal wildlife trade was exhibited globally.
Megan’s passion for ecotourism began while on Natural Habitat’s first ever adventure—observing harp seal pups in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. She witnessed the consequences of climate change on seal populations and learned about other anthropogenic threats, such as fur hunting. The expedition inspired her to become a lifelong advocate for the protection of endangered species.
Through photojournalism, Megan explores intersectional solutions to combat social and environmental injustices. Her visual narratives depict human-wildlife conflict and coexistence, and inform science research and legislation in the most vulnerable communities.
Megan’s explorations have taken her to the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro, across African savannas to track pangolins, beneath rainforest canopies of Southeast Asia, and through the dancing grasses of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem to document Indigenous-led conservation efforts.
Behind her wildlife lens, Megan can be spotted hiking with her rescue greyhound, learning about obscure animal facts, and searching for whale sharks on her upcoming adventure to the Galapagos Islands!
‘Namib’ derives from the Nama language, meaning “an area where there is nothing.” This vast region extends for 1,200 miles along the Atlantic coast—from...
Watch Nat Hab’s “The Big Bad Wolf” and Read on for an Exclusive Interview with the Film’s Co-Producer—Wildlife Biologist, Aaron Bott Directed by Andrew...
In the shadow of ancient and dense pine forests, a sage-grouse burrows beneath a blanket of deep snow. Guided by gleaming starlight, a snowshoe hare drifts...
The Time is Now Established in 2017 by Rainforest Partnership, World Rainforest Day recognizes forests as one of the most powerful and cost-effective climate...
SQUID The shortfin squid inhabits the continental shelf and slope waters of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean, from Newfoundland to the central east coast of...
Building a Shared Future Exactly one month after Earth Day, on May 22, global communities will join in solidarity to celebrate the International Day for...
Circle the Land of Fire and Ice Like a Local Shaped by natural forces and steeped in supernatural splendors, this arctic island at the outer edge of Europe...
“Happy Easter” Read the cryptic note left by an anonymous source on March 9, just outside the Cambridge University Librarian’s office, on the fourth floor...
Plastic Pollution According to the 2019 report, Plastic & Climate: The Hidden Costs of a Plastic Planet, published by the Center for Environmental Law...
The impacts of the climate crisis—observable through the frequency and ferocity of extreme weather events—fall disproportionately on the youth and pose...
Known as ‘The Land of The Giants’—Chobe National Park, nestled in the north of Botswana—is home to Africa’s largest population of elephant (Loxodonta...
The Illegal Wildlife Trade Charismatic megafauna such as rhino, elephant and tiger as well as lesser-known mammals like the pangolin, are among the growing...
A Subarctic Summer Churchill rests at the ecological crossroads of three regions: the Northern Canadian Shield taiga (which represents nearly one-quarter of...
The Whale Makes Us Human “The whale makes us human,” proclaim the Iñupiat (a group of Alaska Natives whose traditional territory spans to the northernmost...
Habitat and History Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) have a circumpolar distribution limited to four distinct sea ice habitats—or ecoregions—of the northern...
The Panda is a Panda! “The panda is a panda,” boldly declared German biologist, George B. Schaller, in his 1994 book, The Last Panda. After nearly five years...
Esperanza: A New Hope With her impressive display of stripes and spots, the young whale shark (Rhincodon typus) glides through the undulating waters, sucks...
Sights, Scents, and Soundscapes Have you ever seen a greater short-horned lizard scrape its crown of spines along a canyon rim? Smelled the fresh spray of a...
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