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Science Friday

The Wonders of Moss, Clean. Sept 11, 2020, Part 1

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.4 • 6.3K Ratings

🗓️ 11 September 2020

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

These Moss Are Living Their Best Life—Under Rocks Desert mosses live a much different life than their cousins in lush, water-rich forests. In fact, they spend most of their time dormant: dried out, waiting for the rare rainfall to bring them to life so they can grow and reproduce. Once exposed to water, though, these same mosses can re-animate quickly—within minutes they’re back to photosynthesizing. And in research published in PLoS One this summer, scientists working in the Mojave Desert discovered another bryophyta trick. They found some moss species were using rocks as sun shades, preventing them from drying out as quickly. But not just any rock will do—with the help of semi-translucent quartz, moss are still able to receive small amounts of sunlight, thriving in small shady oases for weeks past the most recent rainfall.  Science Friday producer Christie Taylor talks to Jenna Ekwealor, a co-author on the research and PhD candidate at the University of California-Berkeley.  An Argument For The Benefits Of Not Bathing  If the idea of not showering every day makes you feel icky, how about not showering for years? Writer James Hamblin says he stopped showering five years ago and never looked back. He says his skin has never been better, thanks to his healthy, well-functioning skin microbiome. Hamblin joins Ira to talk about his new book Clean: The New Science of Skin, breaking the rules when it comes to cleanliness, and discovering the benefits of skipping that shower.  COVID-19 Vaccine Developers Promise Not To Rush Testing Pharmaceutical companies are racing to find a vaccine for COVID-19. And there is a huge financial incentive to be the first to produce the first vaccine. But as President Donald Trump promises a vaccine “very soon,” nine of the biggest pharma companies signed a letter that pledged not to put profit—or politics—over sound science.  Science writer Maggie Koerth talks about that letter, as well as bad news for a vaccine clinical trial, which paused this week after an unexplained illness in a participant.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Iroflato. As you know, the pharmaceutical companies are racing to find a vaccine for COVID-19. And of course, there is a huge incentive to be the first one to make one. But nine of the biggest pharma company signed a letter that pledged not to put profit or politics over sound science.

0:22.0

Maggie Kerth is here to fill us in on that story and other science headlines for the week.

0:27.0

She is senior science reporter at 538 based out of Minneapolis.

0:31.5

Welcome back, Maggie.

0:32.6

Hi, thanks for having me.

0:34.1

Pharma companies usually don't come all together to do this.

0:38.9

What does this all mean?

0:44.3

So this is all part of a response to some statements that President Trump has been making, which have kind of put the push to get a COVID-19 vaccine out as soon as possible into the realm of

0:51.2

politics. So he has been claiming that a finished vaccine is coming very soon,

0:55.8

possibly before Election Day, and also arguing that his opponents are the ones who've politicized

1:01.3

the issue by not trusting him on that. Meanwhile, the CDC has started laying out these scenarios

1:06.9

to help states prepare for distributing vaccines as early as November.

1:11.7

And these are timelines that a lot of scientists are calling unrealistic.

1:16.5

So let's just say that up front.

1:18.2

It is extremely unlikely that you will have a vaccine for COVID-19 before the election.

1:23.7

You know, it's even pretty unlikely that you'd be forced to decide whether a hypothetical vaccine released before the election was safe enough to try.

1:32.3

That's because the president's statements have resulted in a lot of pushback from people in charge of this whole vaccine production process.

1:39.5

It's not just the pharmaceutical companies.

1:42.2

It's also the scientific head of Operation Warp Speed and the

1:45.9

director of the National Institutes of Health. So it is important, though, to point out that

1:52.7

what they have said is not, we will not release a vaccine before the election. Instead,

1:58.6

the general message has been kind of what you were saying,

...

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