
Rene Ebersole
@rebersole
Covering science, health, and the environment, I'm an independent journalist with insatiable curiosity and wanderlust.
ID: 26254990
http://reneebersole.com 24-03-2009 15:16:04
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1,1K Followers
1,1K Following

Congratulations! Jessica Camille Aguirre, Rene Ebersole, Lauren Gravitz, Karen Hao, Ferris Jabr, @ejwillingham, @ninaberman, @VirginiaGewin, Emily Mullin, Jeremy Hance, Sam Bloch...

Rene Ebersole (Rene Ebersole) is an award-winning journalist specializing in investigative stories about science, health, and the environment. She will examine the troubling legacy of junk science in the criminal justice system.



Don't get salmon scammed. My latest for National Geographic #WildlifeWatch investigations. nationalgeographic.com/animals/articl…


As Rene Ebersole reported National Geographic earlier this year, he could have faced as much as $1.3 million in fines and up to life in prison for 33 charges related to trafficking protected African cats for the exotic pet trade. He got 18 months. (2/2) nationalgeographic.com/animals/articl…

My newly published story about a spike in raptor killings on the U.K.‘s grouse shooting estates during lockdown. Bonus: a Royal scandal and a reference to Downtown Abbey. Photos by amazing Anastasia Taylor-Lind Taylor Lind. nationalgeographic.com/animals/articl…

Cool Job Alert! Come work with me and my team National Geographic as our first Science Writing Resident! 🎉✍️ This is a year-long opportunity that comes with pay, benefits, and loads of smart & fun colleagues - join us! jobs.disneycareers.com/job/washington…

From the trafficking of cacti in Chile to songbirds in Brazil, from chameleons in Madagascar to falcons in Pakistan, there are many angles to investigating wildlife trafficking. Read GIJN's resource as a guide. buff.ly/3xLGSKq Julian Rademeyer Rene Ebersole John E. Scanlon AO


Thanks to those who emailed, tweeted, shared, and even told me in the grocery store that you appreciated this story. I’m so grateful! Additional thanks to editor #LeslieEaton at #TheMarshallProject and experts who explain why this is bad news for Justice. themarshallproject.org/2022/03/17/wit…

I recently went behind the scenes covering a Catskills hunting contest where contestants kill coyotes for money and prizes. The logic for these contests--controlling the coyote population--defies science, according to wildlife experts. National Geographic nationalgeographic.com/animals/articl…?

Reporting this story, I learned that coyotes aren't the only animals killed in these competitions. Bobcats, foxes, wolves, skunks, squirrels, rabbits, crows, stingrays are all fair game. Recently, some hunters started using Facebook for their deadly games. nationalgeographic.com/animals/articl…


Rip currents are one of the deadliest hazards along the coast, and keeping people out of them is much harder than you’d think. Instead of relying on warning signs, researchers are looking into what leads to rip-risky behavior at the beach. My latest for Hakai Magazine




Thank you for donating to our new nonprofit, Wildlife Investigative Reporters & Editors (WIRE), providing support for freelance investigative journalists covering environmental crime. We appreciate your generosity! Oliver Payne, @rachaelbale wireonline.org