Skip to main content

Chris Morgan

Host, "The Wild"

About


Chris Morgan is a British-American ecologist, conservationist, filmmaker, TV host and podcaster. His stories from six continents have reached hundreds of millions of people worldwide as part of his mission to connect listeners to nature and to help conserve our beautiful planet.

For over thirty years his ecology and conservation work has focused on bears and other large carnivores worldwide, from the Rockies to Pakistan, and Spain to Ecuador. He emigrated to the US from the UK in 1997 and established Chris Morgan Wildlife for his wildlife research and environmental education work. In 2000, he co-founded the award-winning community-based education program, the Grizzly Bear Outreach Project (GBOP; now Western Wildlife Outreach, WWO), which was designed to bring scientifically credible information about grizzly bears and restoration to local communities of the North Cascades in Washington State.

Through his work as a wilderness guide, he has escorted hundreds of people into wild locations around the world from the Arctic to Antarctica, to share the wonder of nature, and trigger conservation initiatives.

He is the co-founder of Wildlife Media, the non-profit organization that produced BEARTREK, a feature-length documentary (premiered in 2018) that follows Chris’ journey by motorcycle to Alaska, Peru, the Canadian north, and Borneo. The film’s campaign has generated support and exposure for critical bear conservation projects in these areas. Wildlife Media is a proud sponsor of THE WILD. Chris co-created THE WILD podcast with KUOW in 2019 and loves the craft of creating and voicing immersive audio stories that bring people back to nature through their ears, hearts, and minds.

Stories

  • caption: Chris Morgan (left) and Jocelyn Akins (right) move across a snow field in Mount Rainier National Park towards a wolverine camera site.

    True grit: the wild wolverine

    For the first time in 100 years, wolverines are back in Mount Rainier National Park. How did they get there?

  • caption: Dr. Rachel Graham, Evaristo Muschamp and Nelson Ortega ready a hammerhead shark for tagging and release.

    How to love a shark

    There are 540 shark species in the world and 143 of them are endangered. Rachel Graham is their evangelist.

  • caption: Sorraia horses with GPS collars are being used to help rebuild the landscape in the Coa River Valley of Portugal.

    Portugal’s ecological utopia

    A curious story of fires, Stone Age art, rural abandonment, and a mission to bring back an entire forest ecosystem.

  • Livingplanetlogo2

    Living Planet (special episode)

    This is a special episode from the podcast Living Planet from Deutsche Welle. In this episode they explore the efforts to bring life back to seabeds off the coast of Scotland and learn about an app that can tell what species a frog is by its song. A sort of Shazam for amphibians.

  • Season 3 note

    Take our listener survey by clicking the link here. You could be selected to get a WILD sticker.

  • caption: Chris holding a Northern Pacific rattlesnake. The age of a snake can be determined by the number of coils on their rattlers.

    Sitting on a den of rattlesnakes

    Rattlesnakes have long been persecuted, even killed for sport or having their entire dens burned. I head out with two wildlife biologists to look for rattlesnakes as they emerge from hibernation and learn about the important role these snakes play in our ecosystem.