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Undersea Rovers, Swimming Sperm, Teen Inventor, Soil Judging. Sep 23, 2022, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Friday, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Science

4.46.3K Ratings

🗓️ 23 September 2022

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sperm Swim Together To Help Each Other Reach The Egg

New research is complicating our understanding of how, exactly, sperm are able to reach eggs. The predominant theory is that sperm compete against each other, with the strongest swimmer fertilizing the egg.

But a new study, using cow sperm, suggests that sperm might actually swim together, forming clusters to help each other swim upstream to reach the egg.

Researchers created a device that has some of the features of a female reproductive tract, which they tested using a polymer substance that mimics cervical mucus. The intensity of the flow of this mucus-like fluid influenced how well the sperm clustered together. The faster the flow, the more likely the sperm were to band together to swim upstream.

Ira talks with Dr. Chih-Kuan Tung, associate professor of physics at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University about his research on sperm motility, and how it could improve infertility testing in the future.

Mars Rover, Move Over: Making A Rover To Explore The Deep Sea

When you hear the word ‘rover,’ it’s likely your brain imagines another planet. Take Mars, for instance, where the steadfast rolling science labs of Perseverance and Curiosity—and the half dozen robotic rovers before them—slowly examine the geology of the Red Planet for signs of past habitability.

But Earth has rovers too. The autonomous, deep-sea Benthic Rover II, engineered by researchers at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI), trawls a desolate surface too—this one 4,000 meters below the surface of the ocean, on a cold abyssal plain, under the crushing weight of 6,000 pounds per square inch of pressure.

Deep beneath the surface, the rover is seeking data about carbon: What carbon sources make it down to such a deep sea floor? And does that carbon return to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, where it might contribute to global warming, or sequestered safely as an inert part of the ocean sediment?

Ira Flatow talks to engineer Alana Sherman and ecologist Crissy Hufford, both of MBARI, about the work it takes to make a rover for the deep sea, and the value of its data as we look to the future of our oceans.

Ukraine’s Ongoing Tragedy Inspires Teenage Inventor To Locate Landmines

Igor Klymenko is a 17-year-old inventor from Ukraine, and he recently won the Chegg.org Global Student Prize—a $100,000 award given to a young change-maker. Klymenko won it for his invention, the Quadcopter Mines Detector, which is designed to locate underground landmines. The issue of unexploded landmines cannot be understated—some estimates show there could be about 100 million of them scattered across the globe.

Klymenko is a student at both the University of Alberta in Canada and the Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute in Ukraine. He joins Ira this week to talk about the Quadcopter Mines Detector, and how he’s trying to help his home country, Ukraine, through engineering.

Getting the Dirt On The World Of Competitive Soil Judging

If you’re looking for a new sport or hobby to try, forget about rock climbing or kitesurfing. If you don’t mind getting a bit dirty, consider competitive soil judging—a contest in which contestants work to best analyze, identify, and describe the layers of soil in a 5-foot-deep trench dug into a field. People can compete either individually, or in a team format, where different members of the team work to describe the soil’s characteristics—from color, to grain size, to how it interacts with water.

Clare Tallamy, a senior at Virginia Tech majoring in environmental science, recently won the individual competition in an international soil judging contest held in Scotland as part of the 2022 World Congress of Soil Science. She joins Ira to describe how soil judging works, gives an introduction to soil taxonomy, and explains the practical significance of being able to excel at judging a sample of soil.

Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Science Friday, I am I Rep. Lato. Later in the hour, we're experts at sending

0:04.8

rovers to Mars, but did you know we also have rovers deep down in the ocean? Yes.

0:10.2

And how a 17-year-old inventor from Ukraine is trying to use drones to clear landmines.

0:16.8

But first, we're continuing our look at the science behind reproductive health.

0:21.5

This week, we're focusing on a different piece of the reproductive process sperm.

0:26.4

On average, one teaspoon of semen contains about 200 to 500 million sperm.

0:33.4

And how does all that sperm window down to a single winner?

0:36.8

Think back to your high school biology textbook. Or maybe you talked about it in health class.

0:43.9

Specifically, that chapter about human reproduction. The one everyone in class was just a little embarrassed to read.

0:52.1

Well, the story may have gone something like this. Those millions of sperm race against one another.

0:59.9

The strongest swimmer gets to the egg first, beating out all the competing sperm.

1:05.7

However, new research in cows suggests that sperm may actually swim together, forming clusters to help each other swim upstream to reach the egg.

1:18.4

Joining me now to share his fascinating physics of the swimming sperm is my guest, Dr. Chi Kwan Tong, associate professor of physics at North Carolina A&T State University, based in Greensboro, North Carolina.

1:33.6

Dr. Tong, welcome to Science Friday.

1:35.9

It is my pleasure.

1:37.5

All right, let's talk about this. Let's start with the basics.

1:42.1

Your previous research showed that sperm will swim together in groups. How did you originally discover this?

1:49.1

So, the thinking was that when we want to analyze sperm activity, we really want to look at how sperm swim in an environment that better resemble the environment sperm will encounter naturally in the female reproductive tract.

2:04.9

So, we started to use some microfluidic devices to mimic several features that will present in the female reproductive system.

2:14.6

Spirms swim in mucus. They don't swim in those watery, lab medium that we prepare.

2:20.2

So, we started to add polymer into some long-chain molecules into the solution to create this mechanical property we call Viscoy elasticity.

2:33.6

The word means that the fluid is both viscous, means it flows slowly.

...

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