North Korea Bomb Tests, Warming Antarctic Sea Life, the Microbiome, Cuckoo Chuckle
BBC Inside Science
BBC
4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 7 September 2017
⏱️ 33 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea claims to have successfully tested a thermonuclear weapon, a hydrogen bomb. Tom Plant, director of Proliferation and Nuclear Policy at the Royal United Services Institute, talks to Adam Rutherford about how the boast might be proved by monitoring technology around the world.
How will marine life respond to warming of the seas around Antarctica this century? Dramatically, according to the results of the most realistic attempt so far to warm the sea bed to temperatures predicted for the coming decades. The British Antarctic Survey installed gently heated panels at 12 metres depth off the West Antarctic coast to mimic rock surfaces and then over 9 months monitored how marine creatures colonised and grew on them. All creatures flourished on panels at 1 degree C above today's chilly waters and in fact grew astonishingly quickly on them. But a 2 degree increase saw some continue to flourish vigorously but many species fail. Experiment mastermind Lloyd Peck tells Adam what the findings may mean, and describes the extraordinary cold water diving skills that made the experiment a success.
'I contain Multitudes' is shortlisted for the Royal Society Insight Investment Science Book Prize this year. Its subject is the microbiome - the trillions of benign , friendly and not so friendly bacteria which inhabit our bodies and those of all other animals.
For 30 years, Cambridge University zoologists have studied the evolutionary arms race between the cuckoo and the reed warbler that rears the cheating bird's offspring. They have figured out many of the deceptions and counter-tactics adopted by the two co-evolving species. The latest revelation concerns the strange chuckling call which the female cuckoo makes after laying her egg in the warbler's nest. Jenny York describes the experiments which show that the cuckoo is mimicking a predatory sparrow hawk which distracts the warblers and makes them much more likely to not recognise her egg as something they should reject from the nest.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello you this is the podcast of Inside Science from BBC Radio 4 first broadcast on the 7th of September |
| 0:05.3 | 2017 I'm Adam Rutherford and it is super awesome to be back thank you to the excellent |
| 0:10.5 | Gareth Mitchell who sat in your ears during the summer while I was gadding around in Sweden. |
| 0:15.2 | Here's the week's essential science for your brain. |
| 0:18.0 | If you think of scientists as nutty professor types, weeds with bottle-rimmed glasses. |
| 0:23.6 | We've got climate change experiments that involve the bad assary of scuba diving in sub-zero waters, |
| 0:29.1 | dodging icebergs throughout the darkness of the Antarctic winter to measure how marine animals will cope with |
| 0:34.8 | warming oceans. |
| 0:35.8 | We've got the penultimate entry in the Royal Society Book Prize shortlist. |
| 0:40.0 | This week it is the tale of how you are never alone, |
| 0:42.9 | for you contain multitudes. |
| 0:44.7 | Science writer Ed Young on the trillions of bacteria |
| 0:47.6 | that happily live on and in us. |
| 0:50.6 | And we've got the latest in our infrequent unofficial series, Animals Behaving Like Total Jerks. |
| 0:56.5 | This week, the cuckoo. |
| 0:58.0 | Scientists have worked out why after all the stealth ninja behavior that these birds do to replace a re-warbler's egg with one of their own, |
| 1:05.6 | female cuckles cackle moniacly like a bond villain. |
| 1:09.4 | But first... So I don't know don't think you'll be a chong chigog |
| 1:13.4 | and be on this me |
| 1:15.3 | and not on the long time you on to be on the |
| 1:17.4 | and young people to go and be on to be on the |
| 1:18.3 | and young people |
... |
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