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Science Friday

Summer Science Books, Naked Mole Rats. July 3, 2020, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.46.3K Ratings

🗓️ 3 July 2020

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The pandemic has nixed many summer vacation plans, but our summer science book list will help you still escape. While staying socially distant, you can take a trip to the great outdoors to unlock the mysteries of bird behaviors. Or instead of trekking to a museum, you can learn about the little-known history of lightbulbs, clocks, and other inventions. Our guests Stephanie Sendaula and Sarah Olson Michel talk with Ira about their favorite science book picks for summer reading. Naked mole rats, native to East Africa, are strange mammals: They’re almost completely hairless. They live in underground colonies, like ants. And, like ants and bees, they have a single reproducing “queen.” Their biology is also unique: They resist cancer, live a long time for such small rodents (often for 30 years or more), and have been found not just to tolerate high, normally toxic levels of carbon dioxide in their nests—but require them. And in the newest strange discovery, researchers writing in Cell earlier this year found that mole rats were prone to anxiety and even seizures when carbon dioxide levels get too low, such as in an environment similar to above-ground air. Ira talks to the paper’s co-author Dan McCloskey, a neuroscientist at the City University of New York. McCloskey explains why mole rat brains might be helpful guides to human brains, especially in the case of infants who have seizures with high fevers. Plus, the mystery of how such homebodies found new colonies, and other naked mole rat oddities.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Plato. I've seen many people on social media asking for book

0:05.9

recommendations as they stay homebound during this pandemic. They have run out of books and book ideas.

0:12.5

And if you're one of them, we're here to help you with our summer reading list. Yes, I know

0:17.3

summer started about a week ago, but there's a virus going on out there,

0:21.1

so we've been a bit distracted. Forgive us.

0:24.4

The good news now is that if you're looking for something new to read, we have the suggestions.

0:29.9

I want to welcome our panel.

0:32.6

Joining us now is Stephanie Sandala, Associate Editor for Library Journal Reviews,

0:37.1

and Sarah Olson-Mitchell,

0:38.7

science writer and book reviewer and biology undergrad at Oregon State University in Corvallus.

0:44.0

Welcome to Science Friday.

0:45.8

Thank you.

0:46.4

We're so happy to be here.

0:47.6

Do you both get what I get that people are just reading and reading and reading while they're

0:52.2

staying home?

0:53.7

I mean, I especially have lately.

0:55.7

I mean, I've kind of like taken a break from Netflix and chill.

0:59.0

So reading is like a nice little change of pace for me for the summer months.

1:04.5

Yeah.

1:04.9

And I think people have run out of books because I really do think that we can help them out today.

1:09.1

So let's get going. Now that it is summer,

1:13.1

people are trying to escape into nature. Stephanie, do you have a book about what might be a good

...

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