Inuits and Denisovans, Sex and woodlice, Peace through particle physics, Caspar the octopus in peril?
BBC Inside Science
BBC
4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 22 December 2016
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Can Inuit people survive the Arctic cold thanks to deep past liaisons with another species? Adam Rutherford talks to geneticist Rasmus Nielsen who says that's part of the answer. His team's research has identified a particular section of the Inuit people's genome which looks as though it originally came from a long extinct population of humans who lived in Siberia 50,000 years ago. The genes concerned are involved in physiological processes advantageous to adapting to the cold. The conclusion is that at some point, the ancestors of Inuits interbred with members of this other species of human (known as the Denisovans) before people arrived in Greenland.
Also in the programme:
The woodlice which are made either female or male because of a gene that once belonged a bacterium. The gene came from a dead microbe and was incorporated by chance into the woodlouse genome. This is the first known instance of the invention of an animal sex chromosome through bacterial donation. We talk to Richard Cordaux of the University of Poitiers and Nick Lane of University College London about the discovery.
Peace through particle physics. Roland Pease visits SESAME in Jordan - the Middle East's first synchrotron facility is about to start operating. The experiment brings together scientists from all over the Middle East in common cause, with for example Israeli, Palestinian, Iranian, Egyptian and Turkish scientists working side by side.
Marine ecologist Autun Purser tells Adam about his European team's discovery of ghostly octopods living at 4,000 metres on the dark, cold sea bed of the Pacific ocean. Autun's camera has caught extraordinary egg brooding behaviour by this new kind of octopus. It lays its eggs half way up the stalks of dead sponges and then guards them for several years until they hatch. Unfortunately, the sponges only grow on lumps of metal-rich rock called manganese nodules which form slowly on the deep sea floor. Several companies are now exploring the possibility of extracting vast quantities of these nodules in deep sea mining, threatening the existence of the sponges and the octopods depending on them.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello you this is the penultimate inside science of the year from BBC Radio 4 |
| 0:04.3 | this one first broadcast on the 22nd of December 2016 I'm Adam Rutherford and |
| 0:09.6 | thank you all so much for listening all year round. Special thanks to my excellent producer Andrew Luck Baker. |
| 0:15.6 | What a lot of scienceing we've been doing this year, |
| 0:18.2 | and here's the latest. |
| 0:19.7 | A newly discovered ghostly octopus that lays its eggs on spindly stalks at the bottom of the ocean. |
| 0:25.0 | We've got sex in woodlice, the utterly bizarre way that they determine whether they're male or female, |
| 0:31.0 | it involves bacteria. |
| 0:33.0 | And the story of the Middle Eastern project |
| 0:35.0 | bringing people together through the all-encompassing umbrella |
| 0:38.0 | of particle physics. |
| 0:39.0 | Isn't it nice to be just a part of a huge community of different cultures and religions and |
| 0:46.4 | point of views and motivations but you are still all working for one project. |
| 0:51.6 | I feel that I love this place I love the concept behind it maybe. |
| 0:56.0 | But first to the frozen north there's been a constant revolution in evolutionary genetics |
| 1:01.4 | in the last few years our understanding of how the peoples of prehistory moved |
| 1:05.6 | around the planet has been transformed by the study of their DNA, now the latest tool |
| 1:10.9 | in the historian's shed. We can delve into the genomes of the living and the long dead |
| 1:15.4 | and work out how people got to be who they are now. We know a lot about Europe and Africa these days, |
| 1:21.3 | how we bred with Neanderthals and other human species such as the Denisovans, |
| 1:26.2 | a Siberian type of human known only from a couple of teeth and a single finger bone from more than 50,000 years ago, but whose complete genome has been |
| 1:35.8 | read. |
... |
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