Francesca Claverie is the Native Plant Program Manager at the Borderlands Restoration Network. Based in the southern Arizona town of Patagonia, the Borderlands Restoration Network\u2019s mission is \u201cto grow a restorative economy by rebuilding healthy ecosystems, restoring habitat for plants and wildlife, and reconnecting our border communities to the land through shared learning.\u201d Through binational partnerships and community-led innovation, Francesca and her team are making progress toward solving many border-specific conservation challenges\u2013 challenges that are often not very well known to those of us living far from the border.
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We could easily spend five or six hours discussing Francesca\u2019s various conservation projects, but for this hour-long conversation, we zoned in one particularly innovative project that spans the US-Mexico border called "Bacanora for Bats: Binational Conservation and Sustainable Agave Spirits." The project is focused on conserving agave plants\u2013 plants that are a critical food source for specific migrating bat populations and are simultaneously under a great deal of pressure because of the booming tequila and Bacanora industries. As you\u2019ll hear her explain, Francesca and her team have implemented a one-of-a-kind system that allows for continued economic prosperity from agave production, but not at the expense of the bat populations. It\u2019s a perfect example of a community-driven, win-win conservation solution.
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A little more than two years ago, the project was awarded the Salazar Center\u2019s Connectivity Challenge prize\u2013 a $100,000 award that Francesca and her binational team have used to implement this innovative conservation solution. So we obviously talk about how those funds have been put to use and some of the successes that have resulted from the prize. We also discuss some of the unexpected opportunities and challenges that have arisen during the project, and how changing political administrations on both sides of the border have affected her work. We go into great detail about bats, the ecology of agave plants, and specific challenges that come with working across borders. Francesca also has a fascinating personal and professional trajectory, so we talk about her childhood spent on the California-Mexico border and how she decided to pursue conservation as a career. She also offers up some excellent book recommendations and some wise parting words.
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I was so inspired by Francesca and her work along the border, and I believe there are lessons in this conversation that can be applied by anyone working in the conservation sector. Thanks to Francesca for taking the time to chat, and thank you for listening.
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This episode is brought to you in partnership with the Salazar Center for North American Conservation. To register for the fourth annual International Symposium on Conservation Impact, go to salazarcenter.colostate.edu and receive $25 off symposium registration with the code "25OffReg".
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