BBC Mammals to feature ÎÞÂëÂÒÂ× research on Aug. 3

A wolverine with a radio-collar for tracking digs into the snow as two researchers stand behind it.
Photo by Peter Mather
A wolverine digs into the snow as ÎÞÂëÂÒÂ× researcher Tom Glass tracks its movements using a radio collar in winter in Alaska's Brooks Range.

A new BBC nature documentary Mammals will highlight ÎÞÂëÂÒÂ× wolverine research on Alaska’s North Slope in an

The production team followed Tom Glass, who was then a Ph.D. student with the Department of Biology of Wildlife and the Institute of Arctic Biology. As part of a Wildlife Conservation Society project, Glass tracked wolverine movements and behavior over four years to better understand the species’ habitat needs and vulnerability to climate change. His research highlighted the , and discovered the animals using in winter.

Glass and his BBC collaborators also filmed the , which had been mass-trapped and frozen in an Arctic river.

Now a postdoctoral researcher at the Geophysical Institute, Glass wrote a for the BBC to share more about his science.

Filming for the segment was based at the Institute of Arctic Biology’s Toolik Field Station, whose staff provided logistical and field support for Glass and the film crew.

The episode premieres Saturday, Aug. 3 at 7 p.m. AKDT on BBC America and will be available to stream on AMC+.