Age, Biography and Wiki

Mark Carwardine is a British zoologist, author, photographer, and television presenter. He was born on 9 March 1959 in British. He is best known for his work on the BBC television series Last Chance to See, which he co-presented with Stephen Fry. Carwardine studied zoology at the University of Bristol, and has since worked as a freelance writer, photographer, and broadcaster. He has written more than 40 books on wildlife and conservation, and has contributed to numerous magazines and newspapers. He has also presented several television series, including the BBC's Wildlife on One and Animal Planet's Wild Things. Carwardine is a patron of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, and a trustee of the Born Free Foundation. He is also a Fellow of the Zoological Society of London. As of 2021, Mark Carwardine's net worth is estimated to be around $2 million.

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Age 65 years old
Zodiac Sign Pisces
Born 9 March, 1959
Birthday 9 March
Birthplace N/A
Nationality United Kingdom

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 9 March. He is a member of famous with the age 65 years old group.

Mark Carwardine Height, Weight & Measurements

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Mark Carwardine Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Mark Carwardine worth at the age of 65 years old? Mark Carwardine’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from United Kingdom. We have estimated Mark Carwardine's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Net Worth in 2022 Pending
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Timeline

2020

Carwardine has written more than fifty books. Most recently he has written the ground-breaking Handbook of Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises (Bloomsbury 2020) and an eBook, Digital Workflow for Wildlife Photographers. In 2009, he wrote Last Chance to See: In the Footsteps of Douglas Adams (HarperCollins). This is a sequel to the best-selling book, Last Chance to See, which he wrote with the late Douglas Adams (author of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy). Other books that Carwardine has written include Mark Carwardine's Guide to Whale Watching in North America (Bloomsbury, 2017), Mark Carwardine's Guide to Whale Watching in Britain and Europe (Bloomsbury, 2016), the award-winning Shark Watcher's Handbook and Eyewitness Handbooks: Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises, which is the best-selling cetacean field guide ever published (nearly a million copies in print). Carwardine also writes a monthly column in BBC Wildlife magazine, and has written hundreds of articles for newspapers and magazines.

Carwardine has an extensive collection of wildlife, nature and environment photographs taken on all seven continents and in more than a hundred countries. He wrote a digital workflow eBook in April 2020 (Digital Workflow for Wildlife Photographers). He was also Chairman of the judging panel for the prestigious Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition for seven years since 2005, run by the Natural History Museum and BBC Wildlife.

2017

A video of the incident was uploaded to YouTube, where it received more than 700,000 views in the first week. As of July 2017 it has been viewed more than 7.3 million times.

2010

In spring 2010, he co-presented The Museum of Life (BBC2, 6 episodes), which explored the pioneering and often surprising research work and wildlife collections of the Natural History Museum, in London.

On BBC2 in October 2010 there was an additional Last Chance to See special by Carwardine and Fry about the northern white rhino, Last Chance to See: Return of the Rhino, which followed the re-introduction of zoo-raised rhinos into the wild.

Also on BBC2 on 7 November 2010 Carwardine and Fry co-presented Stephen Fry and the Great American Oil Spill about the effects, four months after the BP oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

2009

In autumn 2009, he joined forces with Stephen Fry to present a follow-up to the original Last Chance to See with the late Douglas Adams. This was the six-part BBC2 television series, also called Last Chance to See which concerned the very same endangered species as in the original and how they have fared twenty years on. The series not only updated the situation with most of the endangered species featured in the original series but looked at some new ones, including the blue whale in Baja California, Mexico.

In 2009, Carwardine and television presenter Stephen Fry visited Codfish Island in New Zealand as part of a series for the Last Chance to See, focusing on endangered species around the world. While they were filming a rare kakapo bird called Sirocco, the bird hopped onto Carwardine's head and attempted to mate with him. The scene itself and Fry's commentary, "Sorry, but this is one of the funniest things I've ever seen. You are being shagged by a rare parrot", proved an instant television hit, being featured on news items around the world.

1989

In 1989 the BBC Radio 4 series Last Chance to See and the subsequent book (1990) described eight expeditions by Carwardine and writer Douglas Adams to find and report on some of the most endangered species around the world. These were the aye-aye in Madagascar, the Komodo dragon in Indonesia, the kakapo in New Zealand, the Amazonian manatee in Brazil, the Yangtze river dolphin in China, the Juan Fernández fur seal in Chile, the northern white rhino in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Rodrigues fruit bat in Mauritius.

1959

Mark Carwardine (born 9 March 1959) is a British zoologist who achieved widespread recognition with his 20-year conservation project – Last Chance to See – which involved round-the-world expeditions with Douglas Adams and Stephen Fry. The first series was aired on BBC Radio 4 in 1990, and the second, a TV series, on BBC2 in 2009. There are two books about the project: Last Chance to See, which he co-wrote with Adams (1990), and Last Chance to See: In the footsteps of Douglas Adams (2009). He is a leading and outspoken conservationist, and a prolific broadcaster, columnist and photographer.