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BBC Inside Science

GM plants; Svalbard Seed Vault; Directed Evolution; Dolphin Snot

BBC Inside Science

BBC

Science

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 26 May 2016

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The topic of GM plants raises strong opinions and many questions. This week, the Royal Society published answers to some of those questions. Adam speaks to Professor Ottoline Leyser, plant science expert and Head of the Sainsbury Lab in Cambridge. She was involved in writing the responses and Adam quizzes her on the possible issues with GM crops.

Institutes from around the world made deposits to the Svalbard Global Seed Vault this week. More than 8,000 varieties of crops from Germany, Thailand, New Zealand, and the World Vegetable Center arrived at the Vault, located on a remote Norwegian archipelago, to be stored deep within the permafrost. Reporter Marnie Chesterton was there to see it happen, and take a tour of this normally inaccessible place. The Vault is located within the Arctic Circle, and helps to protect the biodiversity of some of the world’s most important crops against climate change, war and natural disaster.

This week Professor Frances Arnold was awarded the Millennium Technology Prize; the Finnish version of the Nobel Prize. Her work is a process called Directed Evolution, and involves creating batches of mutant proteins to see if the mutations make them better at certain functions.

Dolphins use ultrasound to echolocate. Until recently, scientists did not quite know how. Making ultrasonic noises normally requires some hard surfaces such as metal, and dolphins don’t have metal in their blowholes. Acoustic scientists Aaron Thode at the Scripps Institute of Oceanography in San Diego thinks he’s solved this conundrum, and it involves snot.

Producer: Jen Whyntie

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello You're

0:02.0

This is the podcast version of Inside Science from BBC Radio 4 first broadcast on the 26th of May 2016

0:08.0

a special longer version with more GM plants and dolphin snot you're welcome.

0:13.0

Quick pod plug.

0:14.4

Next week begins the new series of the curious cases of Rutherford and Fry

0:18.0

with me and the all-round spectacular marvel that is Dr. Hannah Fry

0:21.3

in which we solve your scientific conundrums and she makes me do

0:24.7

stupid things send us your questions curious cases at BBC.co. UK it starts next week on

0:31.4

the wireless every day at midday, but for you the Pod Faithful, the first

0:35.9

three episodes are already up and ready to go, how to make the perfect cup of tea, why things in space

0:41.9

are round and why do we cry.

0:44.4

Everything findable using your internet fingers and somewhere in BBC.co.

0:48.8

UK.

0:49.8

Radio 4.

0:51.0

We're off to the far north to where all the world's seeds will be kept safe when the

0:55.0

apocalypse comes, the Svalbard Seed Bank. We take an evolutionary approach to designing molecules

1:00.8

that appear in everything from washing powder to rocket fuel,

1:04.3

and we address an important acoustic ecology question.

1:07.3

How do dolphins make ultrasonic clicks and whistles?

1:10.5

The answer is, snot, dolphin snot. But first, genetic modification. Earlier

1:16.0

this week the UK's National Academy of Science, the Royal Society, launched a document

1:20.5

called GM Plants, Questions and Answers. It's not really a report, it's more a sort of

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