meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Life Scientific

Tracey Rogers on leopard seals and Antarctica

The Life Scientific

BBC

Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Science

4.61.4K Ratings

🗓️ 26 September 2017

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Marine ecologist Tracey Rogers talks to Jim Al Khalili about her research on one of Antarctica's top predators. This is the leopard seal - a ten foot long killer which glides among the ice floes in search of prey ranging from other seals to penguins to tiny krill. Tracey's research has encompassed the animal's prolific and eerie underwater singing to radical changes in its diet that appear to be linked to climate change.

Now a senior researcher at the University of New South Wales in Australia, Tracey first encountered the species as a less than successful seal trainer at a zoo in Sydney. There she met a giant female leopard seal named Astrid. Astrid's singing one Christmas day in the early 1990s set Tracey on the path to become the world's authority on this Antarctic species.

Tracey tells Jim how her first expedition to study leopard seals was met with almost universal scepticism until she dropped an underwater microphone into the water. In the following 25 years, she has worked to decode the meanings and qualities of the leopard seal song and explored the changes being forced upon the species by climate change. Tracey describes what made her return to Antarctica again and again and tells the story of how she almost met her end in the perilous shifting world of the pack ice. And then there's the time a leopard seal mistook her for a penguin.

There is a longer version of this interview in the podcast of this episode - more on the seal vocalisations and how Tracey saved the life on a young colleague who fell into the freezing sea.

Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, it's Doleepa, and I'm at your service.

0:04.7

Join me as I serve up personal conversations with my sensational guests.

0:08.8

Do a leap interviews, Tim Cook.

0:11.2

Technology doesn't want to be good or bad.

0:15.0

It's in the hands of the creator.

0:16.7

It's not every day that I have the CEO of the world's biggest company in my living room.

0:20.7

If you're looking at your phone more than you're looking in someone's eyes, you're doing the wrong thing.

0:26.0

Julie, at your service.

0:28.0

Listen to all episodes on BBC sales.

0:31.6

This is the BBC. For the last 25 years these extraordinary sounds have been the musical accompaniment to the career of my guest today. They were recorded

0:54.4

underwater in the coldest place on earth. This is the song of the leopard seal

0:59.4

one of Antarctica's top predators and my guest is the world's leading expert on this

1:04.4

fearsome species of marine mammal. She is Tracy Rogers, associate professor of

1:09.2

ecology and evolution at the University of New South Wales in Sydney.

1:13.0

Her research involves studying the vocalizations and ecology of seals

1:18.0

and also whales in Antarctica and the southern ocean.

1:21.0

She's interested in the changes they've undergone over

1:24.0

evolutionary time as well as during much more recent times where they may be due to

1:28.6

climate change. Her methods began with recording leopard Seal songs and now include collecting tissue

1:34.9

samples to analyze their diets.

1:37.4

Traces with me today to talk about her seal research and about life working in Antarctica.

1:43.0

Tracy Rogers, welcome to the life scientific.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from BBC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of BBC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.