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BBC Inside Science

Insects disappearing, DNA Biosensor, Dog faces, Bandit dinosaur

BBC Inside Science

BBC

Science

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 26 October 2017

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The total biomass of flying insects in the environment has decreased by 75% in the last quarter of a century. That's the conclusion of research published at the end of last week in the journal PLOS One. The discovery, made in Germany, has shocked many, but should we in the UK be worried too? The answer is yes, according to Adam Rutherford's guests Dave Goulson, professor of biology at the University of Sussex, and Michael McCarthy, environmental journalist and author of 'The Moth Snow Storm.'

The speed and ease of precise infection diagnosis could be transformed by synthetic biologists at Imperial College, London. Paul Freemont tells Adam about a simple DNA biosensor that turns green in the presence of a pneumonia-causing bacterium that is a particular problem for people with Cystic Fibrosis. He adds that the technology is adaptable to any kind of bacteria and may also aid efforts to curb the spread of antibiotic resistance.

When dogs know you are looking at them, they ramp up the expressiveness of their faces. Marnie Chesterton visits the Dog Cognition Centre at the University of Portsmouth to talk to the researchers who made this discovery, and to meet Jimmy the Staffy.

Palaeontologists at the University of Bristol have figured out the colour patterning on a dinosaur that lived 120 million years ago. Sinosauropteryx was a small feathered dinosaur. Two spectacular fossils of it were found in northeast China. The specimens are so well preserved that remnants of pigment remain in the feathers. This allows Jakob Vinter and colleagues to see that Sinosauropteryx was reddish brown in colour, with light stripes on its tail, light and dark counter-shading on its body and a dashing bandit-style face mask.

Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello You, this is the podcast of Inside Science from BBC Radio 4, first broadcast on the 26th of October 2017.

0:08.0

I'm Adam Rutherford. Long versions of some of the interviews today for you special people we've got a new

0:13.4

means for identifying deadly bacterial infections quickly and precisely bizarrely

0:18.8

it's made of DNA and we've got the science of dog faces.

0:23.0

We've also got the story about sinosauropteryx, the tiny cute dinosaur with stripes and

0:27.7

countershading and a face mask.

0:29.7

We couldn't decide whether it was Zorro or Robin from Batman or just sunglasses,

0:34.4

but there's a picture on the website so you can decide.

0:37.2

But first, they can be beautiful, they can be profoundly annoying to us.

0:41.7

Either way, flying insects are absolutely central to all ecosystems

0:46.9

all over the world. 80% of wildflowers are pollinated by insects, 60% of birds rely on insects for food.

0:55.5

So we should be extremely concerned by the publication of a new study last week that measures

1:00.8

a 75% decline in flying insects over the last 27 years.

1:06.5

We talk often of conservation projects for large beasts, we call them charismatic animals,

1:11.3

we even talk about the importance of bees as pollinators and their decline,

1:15.0

but this new paper reports a catastrophic decline across all flying insects.

1:21.0

Dave Galsen from the University of Sussex was involved in the study. insects.

1:24.0

Dave Galson from the University of Sussex was involved in the study. The insects were sampled.

1:25.0

We're using malaise traps, which are a kind of tent-like structure that flying insects bump into and walk into a little pot.

1:32.0

And it's a bunch of amateur... insects bump into and walk into a little pot.

1:33.0

And there's a bunch of amateur entomologists

1:35.8

right across Germany for the last 26 years

...

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