4.6 • 611 Ratings
🗓️ 1 November 2022
⏱️ 33 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Rutendo and Sebastian are looking at stories and whether it matters who is telling them. Paula Kahumbu is a renowned conservationist and film-maker in Kenya who wants to see more African stories told by Africans for Africans. “It's really important that Iam empowered to tell my own story. Not just that it's authentic, which therefore will resonate with the audiences ...but also it boosts my ability to have more impact out there.” Through her programme: ‘Wildlife Warriors’, Paula is training, championing and inspiring future generations of Africans to pursue careers in nature.
Storytelling might feel uniquely human, but it plays an important role in the animal world too, with animals learning certain behaviours by copying family members. Just as human language is passed down through generations, animals learn vocalisations by listening to individuals around them. So what happens when that species is dying out? Daniel Appleby, of the Difficult Bird Research Group atCanberra University, describes how the scarcity of the Regent Honeyeater means the bird is forgetting its own song.
And when an artist uses mushrooms to generate music through a synthesiser, who is the composer – the musician or the fungi?
Credits:
The BBC Earth podcast is presented by Sebastian Echeverri and Rutendo Shackleton.
This episode was produced by Rachel Byrne and Geoff Marsh.
The researchers were Seb Masters and Dawood Quereshi.
The Production Manager was Catherine Stringer and the Production Co-ordinator was Gemma Wootton.
Podcast Theme Music was composed by Axel Kacoutié, with mixing and additional sound design by Peregrine Andrews.
The Associate Producer is Cristen Caine and the Executive Producer is Deborah Dudgeon.
Special thanks to:
Daniel Appleby from the Difficult Bird Research Centre at the Australian National University in Canberra.
Paula Kahumbu from WildlifeDirect.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | There's a story my mom loves to tell. |
0:03.2 | It's taken on a life of its own. |
0:05.9 | And the story is about me. |
0:09.6 | So, Mom, I would love for you to tell the story of what I got up to at the kids' camp that they had on the holidays. |
0:19.0 | And it was day one. |
0:21.9 | Well, every school holiday |
0:24.5 | there is a school camp |
0:26.6 | and you know |
0:28.7 | in Zimbabwe we are very |
0:30.5 | proud |
0:32.3 | of our wildlife |
0:34.7 | in our farming traditions |
0:36.7 | and culture. |
0:39.8 | So at the school camps, you know, children are taught about conservation, and tendo must have |
0:47.6 | been five years old. |
0:49.8 | And so I'm not really expecting my daughter to be touching anything outside of beetles and spiders, |
0:56.1 | you know, things that you find in the playground. |
1:00.2 | They said there would be a reptologist, but in my mind, I thought he would bring smaller reptiles. |
1:08.9 | I didn't think he would bring snakes. |
1:13.1 | So anyway, my mom left me there for the day. |
1:16.1 | And in the afternoon, she came to pick me up. |
1:21.9 | And all these little kids are running to their moms, |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Jenkins Laura, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Jenkins Laura and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.