logo
episode-header-image
Nov 2022
3m 52s

These Punk Rock Penguins Have a Bizarre ...

Scientific American
About this episode

New Zealand’s erect-crested penguin lays two eggs but rejects the first one—the opposite of how most birds prioritize their offspring.

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Up next
Yesterday
Why Do We Sing? Musicologists and Neuroscientists Seek an Answer
Last year Science Quickly looked across disciplines to piece apart the science of singing. To understand why humans sing, musicologists collaborated on an international study of folk music. To understand how we sing, neuroscientists differentiated how our brain processes speech a ... Show More
24m 49s
Jul 9
What Does an Ailing Coral Reef Sound Like?
Sick coral reefs are visually striking—bleached and lifeless, far from the vibrancy we’ve come to expect. But what does an unhealthy coral system sound like? In this rerun, conservation bioacoustics researcher Isla Keesje Davidson tells Science Quickly all about the changing soun ... Show More
16m 51s
Jul 7
An Astronaut Shares His Passion for Space Photography—Live, from the ISS Cupola
Ten months ago Science Quickly made space history by conducting the first-ever live interview from the cupola of the International Space Station (ISS). Astronaut Matthew Dominick spoke with Rachel Feltman about his work on the ISS and the stunning space photography that first cau ... Show More
17m 35s
Recommended Episodes
Feb 2024
What happens now bird flu has reached the Antarctic?
The moment scientists had been dreading arrived late last year, when H5N1, or bird flu, was found for the first time in the Antarctic. Last week a king penguin on the island of South Georgia became the first in the region to be suspected to have died from the disease. The Guardia ... Show More
13m 39s
Oct 2022
#143 Bird flu sweeps UK; secrets of the Neanderthal family
Wild bird populations have been devastated by an avian flu variant that’s sweeping the UK - and more than 3.5 million captive birds have been culled. It’s expected to be the worst winter on record for avian flu - and the team finds out why.Female robins sing just as much, and jus ... Show More
29m 35s
Dec 2023
Ep. 295: Time for a nap? Chinstrap penguins survive on 10,000 microsleeps a day - Ep. 295: È l’ora di un sonnellino? I pinguini antartici sopravvivono con 10mila micro-sonni al giorno
Researchers say chinstrap penguins have adapted their sleep pattern to their high-stress environment, particularly after the birth of their chicks. - Dei ricercatori sostengono che il pigoscelide antartico abbia adattato i suoi cicli di sonno al loro stile di vita molto stressant ... Show More
7m 32s
May 2024
The Spiny Anteater That’s Not an Anteater
Rick and Marco highlight a rare and unusual species that's known as a “spiny anteater.” It's the egg-laying echidna! Our hosts are joined by San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance senior wildlife care specialists Jen Lebeau and Adam Murdoch to discuss one of the newest species at the Sa ... Show More
24m 36s
Oct 2023
Bird flu reaches Antarctic region
Fear that the highly infectious variant of avian influenza, H5N1, would reach the Antarctic region and put isolated bird populations at risk has finally come to fruition as the first birds on Bird Island in the Atlantic Ocean have come down with the devastating illness. Science m ... Show More
27m 55s
May 2023
What are Ostriches for?
Meet the ostrich, one of nature’s most unusual creatures: a two-metre-tall, flightless bird that struts about the African savannah. CrowdScience listener Pat found herself entranced by seeing them on a wildlife documentary, where two ostriches were exhibiting some bizarre behavio ... Show More
28m 41s
Jul 2024
De deux pères (From two fathers)
Des scientifiques au Japon affirment avoir réussi à produire des souris avec deux pères, en utilisant des œufs issus de cellules mâles. Traduction :Scientists in Japan say they have succeeded in breeding mice with two fathers, using eggs originating from male cells. Hosted on Aca ... Show More
2m 38s
Feb 2023
How Do Cassowaries Work?
These flightless birds are the second heaviest birds in the world -- they can grow as large as an adult human. Learn about them in this episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://animals.howstuffworks.com/birds/cassowary.htmSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy infor ... Show More
8m 3s