radiolab galapagos transcript
Radiolab The test-writers definitely listen to this podcast to get ideas for science passages The science passages you see on the LSAT often have to do with evolution, psychology, and interaction between humans and nature. Yeah, that that was a very unexpected discovery, takes a couple steps to get there, but just to set it up back in 2000, she was on floreana island for the first time. Hosted by Latif Nasser and And if you think of 100,000 goats eating everything in their path, every sort of plant that even the bark off of trees, they destroy the forest. Nearly 200 years later, the Galpagos are undergoing rapid changes that continue to pose and perhaps answer critical questions about the fragility and You can like see him pulsing, breathing. Right? So there are no people there. R. i. Hey, radio lab listeners, Here's a message from our partner, IBM. We know it doesn't make a lot of sense, but our show is listener funded and we need your help. Same exact story that Darwin saw these processes that he described that just never ever stop. He says that when he first got to the Galapagos in the eighties, he couldn't believe that the place was real. The each legs, two clutches were ultimately laid in his corral and the scientists are like George got our hopes up dramatically. Radio lab is supported by the john Templeton Foundation Funding research and catalyzing conversations that inspire people with awe and wonder learn about the latest discoveries in the science of well being, complexity, forgiveness and free will at Templeton dot org, As our co-Hosts Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are out this week, we are re-sharing the perfect episode to start the summer season! You know, they basically feed on the blood of the baby birds. People sent in dozens of tortoises but linda took one look at them and was like no, no no, no they weren't pinto's. How did these little fly babies? 2012-10-10 06:29:29. Surely in four generations you could have 90% of the pinto genome restored. What was that? So you can give a push to this Process. Well, I talked to one scientist sonia klein door for I'm professor in animal behavior at flinders University, south Australia. So linda when she first went to Galapagos to study these tortoises about 30 years ago I did a trip where we backpacked around the caldera. Yeah. Everyone held out hopes for just finding more tortoises back. It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about special events. What happened to the forest, goats, goats? So I took the plane from Kyoto. So I think there's been a change. They blockaded roads. Going back. The adult fly seems to be harmless. So anything you can do helps us thank you for listening and being part of this journey of telling all of these stories about our wild, crazy big small world. They introduced goats to Galapagos, but on islands like Isabella, which is this massive island size of Rhode island, The goats were actually penned into just little part of it Because there was this black lava rock that ran across the island, extremely rough lava that's extremely difficult to walk across 12 miles of it. Well, there's there's a couple of clues that say maybe, Yeah, for example, when you look in the nests, they seem to have fewer parasites and they seem to have more babies that survive 15%. This tiny little dead finch in this box, wow! And that is how they go from 90% go free to 91 to 92 to 93 to 94. And then you go on and actually in under a year through this aerial attack, they end up wiping out 90% of the goats on Isabella. So they did it. We did this amazing story about one of the worst american football games in history. More often, I'm Kareem Yousef and at IBM we use artificial intelligence to solve real world. WNYC's Radiolab series tackles just five topics each season. WebRADIOLAB Galapagos Aired in 2014, this episode describes some of the challenges faced by the Galapagos islands to protect their local species. 179 years later, the Galapagos are undergoing rapid changes that continue to pose -- and possibly answer -- critical questions about the fragility and resilience of life on Earth. the new york public school system has been called the most racially segregated in the country. But the fact is, there's only so much you can do. It's a directional antenna. Radiolab - Galapagos | The Best Podcasts, As Chosen By You earbud.fm by NPR Radiolab Galapagos "I love the Galapagos episode. Image credits: Rene via Adobe Stock. Description Description The other three of money behind them and you see their flags all over santa cruz. They're not exactly and they put them on Pinta and they're just chomping away right now they're living out their lives really happily on pinta. The ideal judas goat, if you will is a goat that would search for and be searched for and that would never get pregnant. We just told you a story about how far humans are willing to go to protect something. Initially it was carl's suggestion was goats, gregarious and like being in groups, they're herd animals. One I particularly love is Radiolab, the NPR mix of nerdy science and audio bombast. Earlier this summer, its gregarious hosts Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich produced an episode entirely on the Galapagos Islands. We all know the Galapagoss role as a laboratory of evolution. Transcript. Today we begin on a plane which carried our newly married producer, tim howard to the Galapagos. And this guy, he doesn't even say anything. It was a magical, magical area. You're saying this pinto DNA was on another island. Access powerful tools to help you find customers, drive sales and manage your day to day. Radiolab is supported in part by the Alfred P. Fund Foundation, enhancing public understanding of science and technology in the modern world. I mean that's what I thought. It's keeping score. But then at a certain point I noticed this one guy by himself standing on the sidewalk wearing a white shirt and jeans, he's waving a flag, but his flag is a different color. So what if we took those tortoises and read them together, select them for the next generation. You know, we assume that it was carbon dioxide carbon dioxide from the breathing. We will stay tuned. For instance, add up as picking the lafayette of the nostrils of the baby birds and what we're starting to see is that they're beginning to consume them. full access to Shopify his entire suite of features. This next part, it's about how far we're willing to go to get something back that we've already lost to restore a place in a creature to its wild state. Well these are very purist sort of visions. Do you hear me? Super limited electricity. Can I get you to introduce yourself? James says a lot of tortoises. Darwins 5 weeks on Galapagos pushed him to develop his theory of evolution and thats also why when we think of evolution we think of the Galapagos and in Not on Penta that had a lot of Penta D. N. A. I remember very clearly the moment was very very exciting. So go join at radio lab dot org slash join and I'll see you all later. This is possibility powered by Shopify. So thank you very much for the interview. They learned that this sound means, so the goats start hiding so they're going to bushes, they won't move, They learn to stand under a tree holding their breath. This is radio lab, we'll be back with producer Tim Howard and this hour on Galapagos. Well, now my last night there, I went to meet up with that guy Leonidas who was running for mayor. Um they seem to have stopped, you know taking over National Park and killing tortoises. Yeah. On the other hand, you had all of these goats that didn't choose to be on the island. He sat there getting more and more and more frustrated and finally he just blurted out shoot that tortoise and quit wasting our time because in his view this the single individual was holding up this huge conservation opportunity. WebRadiolab - Transcripts Subscribe 45 episodes Share Radiolab is on a curiosity bender. By this point, I'm getting super excited and I'm thinking about Darwin and I start reading Voyage of the Beagle, his book on this nook that I had bought for the trip. We're not hunting but you know, looking for fourth day, I was there um I went to the island of floreana which Darwin visited and they're up in the highlands basically in the middle of this yard. Episode Credits:Reported and produced byTim Howard. Listen, wherever you get your podcasts, I'm john, I'm robert Krulwich, this is Radio lab today, a whole hour on the Galapagos islands. Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. Are these finches disappearing very fast, Very slowly, depends on the species. It would be lovely if we could find something like that because if they could find that chemical that love chemical that the flies used to attract each other, they could disrupt it, confuse the flies and screw up their mating. Oh my God. What you do is you sit at the back of the tortoise and first you have to get to where they'll allow you to touch them. You had plants re emerging, you had trees growing back and in a really short period of time. And you have this one here. As our co-Hosts Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are out this week, we are re-sharing the perfect episode to start the summer season! It's like yes look at this. But even worse so far. Sometimes you have a year this is justa flop. WebCommission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs. Our staff includes Simon Adler, jeremy bloom becca Bressler, Rachel, Cusick, w. Harry for tuna, david gable Maria paz gutierrez, Sindhu unison bend um matt Kielty anne McEwen Alex Neeson sarah, carry on a rescue it pas sarah sand back. We've done so much on the show since last summer. A given episode WebNature and World Cultures, Sp2021 Prof Sandy Brown Listening Guide:Radiolab, Galapagos Please use the sections below to take notes on key moments, quotes, events, and And we all agreed because the calls are really distinct, easy to tell apart. Thanks to Trish Dolman and screen siren pictures, Alex gala font Mathias espinosa. Darwin's five weeks on Galapagos pushed him to develop his theory of evolution. WebWe are dedicating a whole hour to the Galapagos archipelago, the place that inspired Darwins theory of evolution and natural selection. The new york public school system has been called the most racially segregated in the country. Just out of sympathy for them. I didn't say it was silly. So for starters they put up all these traps. Yeah. Some alligators, but you've got a crap load of fish, you've got a crap load of fungus, fun, fun, fun, fun guy, fungi, fungi or fungi, whatever, you know, Ravelli, whatever you take seriously. You know, it might be like the planes just covered with buffalo or maybe the Serengeti desert with Lines and elephants. It's this on ending struggle. Things might not be silly. Scientists had to find clever ways to help the turtles on the island! Okay, so quick context, Galapagos Islands, cluster of islands way off the coast of Ecuador in the Pacific 19 bigger islands, bunch of smaller ones. Right? It's kind of late, the sun is just starting to set. This one, which first aired in 2014, tells the strange story of a small group of islands that keeps us wondering: will our m. Web72 votes, 254 comments. Joint Review Test the outer edges of what you think you know, Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. This is carl Campbell. They're not sure where it came from or quite how it got here. Their mating calls. I would just I would have shot them first. By the ocean of breath twice, I remember I carried your oxygen. She first came to study tortoises back then. More information But then along come the flies and all of a sudden like over maybe 20 years, these medium tree finch is they start to break their own biggest rule and they start to make outside of their own kind. Normally a female goat would be in heat for maybe a couple of days. It's it's a very simple song. What do they look like? You know sleuthing adventure sonya and her team rounded up some of the birds. Beaks adapted to whatever the they were eating one islands finches had literally like the beak would be shaped sort of long and then the next island. We want to hit the ground running as we go into the next year and you've heard of the lab, we've been talking about it, we've been so excited about it. And what we'd do is we'd find a location as close as we could. I worked for island conservation and I'm based here in the Galapagos islands carl's actually the guy who showed me those tortoises, it was just a, it was a barren landscape, barren, barren grounds. They'll actually go into caves. WebPodcast Transcripts of Radiolab Radiolab Society & Culture Science Latest Transcripts What Up Holmes? What's that? And more importantly, can we? Yeah. It rolls over this forest and it catches in the branches of the trees. WebRadiolab is a radio program produced by WNYC, a public radio station in New York City, and broadcast on public radio stations in the United States. Radiolab: Lucy. We are dedicating a whole hour to the Galapagos archipelago, the place that inspired Darwins theory of evolution and natural selection. journey, but that's the beauty of entrepreneurship. Radio Lab was created by Jack Brabham Rod and is edited by soren wheeler lulu. This is the villain. Yeah, I mean powerful colors. Just wandering by. Yeah, the results of this were absolutely impressive. But I mean in the bigger picture, you can make the argument that humans now affect every square meter of the earth. See? And so in 1994 we had what we called the tortoise summit in England and that was where we started the discussions about what are we going to do, experts came from all over the world linda says we want to get rid of the goats and many of them thought we were nuts and that it was impossible. But here's what they do know. But it's an average. I've got my thing over here and you got your thing over there. Today, the strange story of a small group of islands that raise a big question: is it inevitable that even our most sacred natural landscapes will eventually get swallowed up by humans? So she would end up relying on their songs. You know, like nature in its purest form. That's our working hypothesis which brings us to her idea. We covered disability and access in a way that was totally new for us. There is where evolution is very strong. IBM is using artificial intelligence technology to help businesses solve real world problems such as extending the life cycle of our world's critical infrastructure. They're also seeing baby finches climbing up over each other just struggling to get away from the larva on the bottom of the nest and then they'll even start standing on the nest rim just to avoid being eaten. You can go, I don't know the depths of the Impenetrable jungle, It's been affected by human activity. It's customized for your needs, provides tools to manage your day to day needs and drive sales and helps make your idea real. You know, they, they plow down vegetation disperse seeds, but for centuries they've been hunted by those whalers and in about 1906 The Penta Tortoise went extinct 1906, a little over 100 years ago. Exactly. He wasn't curious. And tortoises. What if on these islands, thousands of tourists arrive every day carrying fruits and chocolates and souvenirs jumping from island to island. They might not be stupid ideas, but we still might not be able to do them. If the party in power now the front runners, if they get elected, then I see a dark and uncertain future, more big hotels, more of these enormous boats, more people. I'm Robert Krulwich. But eventually nature is going to take over and they will evolve into into tortoises. I thought you were gonna say people, it was kind of a collaboration. Galpagos. a short break. Listen 18 min The Political Scene | The New Yorker Corpse Demon Our budget year ends with the school year. Yeah. Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip/80-80vq8sgb). And of course the shock was there was a wave went around the room when he said that I recall seeing a second wave of the spanish translation passed around the room. The place that inspired Charles Darwin to create his theory of evolution, whose basic ingredients are lots of time, isolation and then constant change. So we we just sat in the forest and we would always quiz each other. They kidnapped some people, including some of my crew and they even killed dozens of tortoises, slitting their throats. And then you wait instinctively that loan go will go and find other goats. The flies spreading island to island. iTunes Overcast App Radiolab Page RADIOLAB Baby Blue Blood Drive Did you know that horseshoe crabs have blue blood? Oh my God, they ate the whole back of this little finch. WebRadiolab Galapagos Podcast RESURRECTION (18:01) 10. This is the real thing. When you needed to stop for breath, your hand ran light and steady. This hour is about the Galpagos archipelago, which inspired Darwins theory of evolution and natural selection. WebRadiolab Episode Memory and Forgetting Contributing Organization WNYC (New York, New York) AAPB ID cpb-aacip/80-80vq8sgb If you have more information about this item than what is given here, or if you have concerns about this record, we want to know! I'm soren wheeler lulu and latif are out this week. It feeds on flowers and we think decomposing fruits, baby flies, they're not vegetarians, they will, you know, blood. Oh yes. And those are really interesting ideas, but at some point they're gonna get hungry and they're going to start eating all the other things that you know, you treasure, like the occasional tourists in any case after endless planning and meetings took eight years, I think they commence project Isabella.
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