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Locally Sourced Science
Locally Sourced Science
50 episodes
3 months ago
Aired at *6:30 pm* every other Tuesday on WRFI (88.1 FM Ithaca, 91.9 FM Watkins Glen) “Locally Sourced Science” presents science explorations and events happening in the Finger Lakes Region. We feature interviews with local scientists, news updates about recent discoveries and a calendar of science events in the region. Volunteers who are scientists and science journalists produce our show.
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Natural Sciences
Science,
Astronomy
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All content for Locally Sourced Science is the property of Locally Sourced Science and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Aired at *6:30 pm* every other Tuesday on WRFI (88.1 FM Ithaca, 91.9 FM Watkins Glen) “Locally Sourced Science” presents science explorations and events happening in the Finger Lakes Region. We feature interviews with local scientists, news updates about recent discoveries and a calendar of science events in the region. Volunteers who are scientists and science journalists produce our show.
Show more...
Natural Sciences
Science,
Astronomy
Episodes (20/50)
Locally Sourced Science
LSS 113: Plant Sociability and Chronic Wasting Disease

Horticulturist Brandon George leads a tour of the Cornell Botanic Gardens Bioswale (photo courtesy of B. George)



In today’s episode, you’ll hear interviews of two Cornell scientists who are observers of vastly different organisms living in the great outdoors.



Brandon George (photo courtesy of B. George)



First off, horticulturist Brandon George talks about his observations of the characteristics of how different plant species and cultivars grow in their natural habitat. George talks about the concept of plant sociability in exploring the plantings in the Cornell Botanic Garden Bioswale (https://cornellbotanicgardens.org/location/bioswale-garden/). Brandon George is receiving a Masters in Professional Studies in Public Garden Leadership at the Cornell College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. He explores the field of horticulture at his podcast, “Horticulture Rising” (https://horticulture-rising.libsyn.com/).



White-tailed Deer (photo courtesy of Creative Commons (by Mike Tewkesbury licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0))



The second half of today’s show features an interview with Dr. Krysten Schuler about the incidence of chronic wasting disease (CWD) in wild and captive deer populations. CWD was discovered in captive deer in Pennsylvania near the New York border in late May 2021. Schuler discusses the measures being taken to prevent the spread of CWD to deer in New York State.



Schuler is Assistant Research Professor in the Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences at the Cornell College of Veterinary Medicine.



For more information about Chronic Wasting Disease, visit (https://wildlife.cornell.edu/our-work/cornell-wildlife-health-lab/chronic-wasting-disease-risk-assessment-prevention-and)



To close out today’s show, we feature a number of local science events happening in the month of August:



https://freescienceworkshop.org/



https://www.priweb.org/visit/events#event=67213086;instance=20210813100000



https://www.tcpl.org/events/highkey-science-family-program



http://www.communityscience.org/4h2o/







Producer: Esther Racoosin



Host: Fred Balfour



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions
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4 years ago
30 minutes 10 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 112: Building DIY Neuroscience Tools

Drosophila neurons expressing a calcium indicator linked to Green Fluorescent Protein (left). Do-it-yourself epi-fluorescent microscope imaging labeled neurons (right). Photos courtesy of Dr. James Ryan (left) and Dr. David Deitcher (right)



In today’s show, we feature an report about three neuroscientists who have developed inexpensive “Do-it-yourself” neuroscience research tools. Cornell researchers Drs. Bruce Johnson and David Deitcher, and Hobart and William Smith Colleges professor James Ryan hope that their epifluorescence microscope and micromanipulator can be used in undergraduate laboratory courses. Cornell undergraduate student Joanna Papadakis also speaks about her experience building and using the microscope in her neuroscience lab course.



To learn more, visit: https://www2.hws.edu/ryan-creates-3d-printed-fluorescence-microscope/, and https://www.funjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/june-19-134.pdf?x89760



Eastern Screech Owl (photo courtesy of Esther Racoosin)



Later on in the show, you’ll hear about how Ithaca-area birders Mark Chao and Miyoko Chu introduced passers-by on their evening walks to an Eastern Screech Owl roosting in a dead tree.



We also recognize Asian American and Pacific Islander History Month by profiling the late Nobel Laureate, Dr. Roger Y. Tsien. He, along, with Dr. Martin Chalfie and Dr. Osamu Shimomura, received the 2008 prize in chemistry for the discovery of and development of the green fluorescent protein, GFP for use in cell biological applications.







Producer: Liz Mahood



Interviews: Esther Racoosin



Music: Joe Lewis and Blue Dot Sessions




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4 years ago
27 minutes 3 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 110: Studying Migration of Metastatic Cancer Cells and Embryonic Neural Crest Cells

In today’s episode, we begin by listening again to an interview from March 2020 to re-explore how metastatic cancer cells migrate. In our second interview, we hear about a recent study showing similarities between the metabolic behavior of migrating embryonic neural crest cells and metastatic cancer cells.



Tracking migrating breast cancer cells (photo courtesy of Dr. Mingming Wu)



First off, Dr. Mingming Wu talks about her laboratory’s studies of how tumor cells migrate in response to exposure to chemokine hormones. This work models cancer cell chemoinvasion and its implications in cancer metastasis. Dr. Wu is a Professor in the Cornell Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering. For more information, visit https://biofluidics.bee.cornell.edu/cancer-cell-invasion.html



Distribution of neural crest cells in developing chicken embryo (left) and migrating neural crest cells (right). Photos courtesy of Dr. Marcos Simoes-Costa.



In the second part of today’s show, we speak with Dr. Marcos Simoes-Costa, Assistant Professor in the Cornell Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics. One area of investigation in Dr. Simoes-Costa’s lab is the study of the developmental fate of neural crest cells in the chicken embryo. 



In today’s interview, Dr. Simoes-Costa talks about a recent study investigating what genes are expressed when neural crest cells start to migrate. The neural crest cells began to produce high levels of enzymes related to glycolysis, an anaerobic form of metabolism. This is similar to the metabolic behavior of metastatic cancer cells. For more information about Dr. Simoes-Costa’s work, visit https://research.cornell.edu/news-features/embryo-single-cell-amazing-wonder.



Producer : Liz Mahood



Interviews of Drs. Mingming Wu and Marcos Simoes-Costa: Esther Racoosin



Music: Joe Lewis and Blue Dot Sessions
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4 years ago
30 minutes 1 second

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 109: Women in Paleontology; City Nature Challenge

Dr. M. Alejandra Gandolfo, a paleontologist depicted in the “Daring to Dig” exhibit. Photo taken at a field research site in Argentina. (Photo courtesy of Dr. Gandolfo)



Just in time for Women’s History Month, the Museum of the Earth has opened an exhibit called “Daring to Dig, Women in American Paleontology”.



The exhibit explores the achievements, adventures, and discoveries made by women in American paleontology over the past few centuries.



In today’s show, you’ll hear an interview of Kate Rowell, the organizer of the new exhibit.



For more information about the exhibit, visit https://www.museumoftheearth.org/daring-to-dig/



Volunteer Lucy Gagliardo searches for snails in leaf litter during 2017 Bioblitz at the Cayuga Nature Center



Later on in the show, we speak with Dr. Alexandra Moore, Senior Education Associate at the Paleontological Research Institution. She discusses how citizen scientists can get involved in the City Nature Challenge, an international effort for people to find and document plants and wildlife in cities across the globe.



The local City Nature Challenge is taking place in the Eastern Finger Lakes region from April 30 to May 3. Anyone can participate! For more information about how to take part in this local “bioblitz”, visit: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/city-nature-challenge-2021-ithaca-ny







Producer and Interview of Dr. Alexandra Moore: Esther Racoosin



Interview of Kate Rowell: Dr. Anna Levina



Music: Joe Lewis and Blue Dot Sessions
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4 years ago
30 minutes 1 second

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 108: Women’s History month: recognizing women scientists in the Finger Lakes region

Similar to previous years, in March we recognize women scientists who have connections to the Finger Lakes.



Isa Betancourt is an entomologist and science communicator who received her B.S. from Cornell University and M.S. from Drexel University. She runs The Bugscope! a very popular live broadcast every Thursday ~2:45 pm ET. Her followers can learn about 6 and 8 legged creatures on her Facebook account and on Twitter as well.



She talks to Mark Sarvary about insects and science communication (they share a passion for both of those topics) and her super exciting upcoming adventure with National Geographic.







In a historical piece, Kitty Gifford tells us about Anna Botsford Comstock (September 1, 1854 – August 24, 1930) and her best-selling book The Handbook of Nature Study.



Anna Botsford Comstock, plate III. Wood engraving. Insect life; an introduction to nature-study and a guide for teachers, students, and others interested in out-of-door life (1897), by John Henry Comstock.



Dr. Anna Levina is an Active Learning Postdoctoral Researcher and potato expert at Cornell University. Nancy Ruiz talked to her about potatoes, teaching, pedagogy, and life in general.



Producer: Mark Sarvary



Music/Voiceover: Joe Lewis



Contributors: Kitty Gifford, Nancy Ruiz & Mark Sarvary
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4 years ago
30 minutes

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 107: Under the Microscope

In today’s show, we hear interviews of two different professionals who use microscopes in their work.



Mark Sarvary starts the show off by presenting a review of an exhibition called “The History of Glass and the Microscope”, that was on display in 2016 at the Corning Museum of Glass. You can still read about the exhibit here: (https://www.cmog.org/collection/exhibitions/microscopes).







Diagram of set-up for visualization of Fluorescent-stained proteins on DNA (figure courtesy of Dr. Brooks Crickard (https://blogs.cornell.edu/crickardlab/sample-page-1/))







Our first interview of today’s show is with Dr. Brooks Crickard, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics at Cornell University. He talks about his research using single molecule total internal reflection microscopy (TIRFM). This technique allows him to directly visualize proteins and protein complexes as they function on DNA in real-time. Crickard also discusses challenges he has faced as a new faculty member during the pandemic.



Foldscope parts (bottom) and Instructions (top) (Photo courtesy of Sten Anderson)







Student-collected images using foldscopes (Photo courtesy of Sten Anderson)



In the second part of our show, you’ll hear an interview with Sten Anderson, a science teacher at DeWitt Middle school in Ithaca, New York. He recently taught his 7th grade students how to use foldscopes, flexible, waterproof, paper-based microscopes (www.foldscopes.com).  Students learned how to use foldscopes during both in-person and remote instruction.  Anderson guided students in how to gather, examine and record images of non-living and living specimens.  The purchase of a foldscope for each of his students was made possible by a Red and Gold Grant from the Ithaca Public Education Initiative (http://www.ipei.org).



Producer: Liz Mahood



Segments: Mark Sarvary, Nancy Ruiz, Esther Racoosin



Music: Joe Lewis, Blue Dot Sessions
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4 years ago
29 minutes 23 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 106: The story of the new Cornell CALS Dean and what is new in Alzheimer’s research

In this episode, Mark Sarvary interviewed the new dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Dr. Benjamin Houlton began his term on October 1, 2020, as the Ronald P. Lynch Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. He is also and a professor in the departments of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Global Development.



Hear the story of how Dean Houlton almost received a Cornell Ph.D. and how he works with farmers in both California and in New York state to mitigate the impact of climate change.







In the second interview, Candice Limper talked to Nancy Ruiz about her research at Cornell University, discussing what Alzheimer’s disease is and some of the symptoms. Nancy is a 4th year Ph.D. candidate and is trying to understand what factors contribute to the development of this disease as part of her thesis. During this interview, she describes a mouse model that she uses to understand the molecular mechanisms involved.







In our Locally Birding segment, Kitty Gifford talked about the largest American woodpecker (and used some puns). Kitty mentioned in her segment this recent research: The Re-Establishment of Pileated Woodpeckers in New York City Following Nearly Two Centuries of Extirpation



Pileated woodpecker in Newfield, NY | Photo by Kitty Gifford.



Thanks for listening and thanks to our contributors:



Producer: Mark Sarvary



Segments: Mark Sarvary, Candice Limper, Kitty Gifford



Music: Joe Lewis
Show more...
4 years ago
29 minutes 59 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 105: Science Education in Colleges and Universities – Remote learning and camera use study; and a new course “Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in STEM”

Kitty Gifford interviews Dr. Frank Castelli, Educational research postdoc with the Investigative Biology Teaching Laboratories at Cornell.



Word cloud created by Frank Castelli using student responses.



One of the greatest challenges in online learning is that students do not turn their cameras on and teachers speak into the void. Frank Castelli and his co-author, Mark Sarvary, studied this phenomenon and published a study in the Journal Ecology and Evolution titled  “Why Students Do Not Turn on Their Video Cameras During Online Classes and an Equitable and Inclusive Plan to Encourage Them to Do So,”



The results of the study are discussed along with a plan any instructor can use to encourage camera use:



1. Do NOT require video cameras to be turned on and do offer alternatives.



2. Explicitly encourage camera use, explain why you are doing so, and establish the norm



3. Address potential distractions and give breaks to help maintain attention.



4. Use active learning techniques to keep students engaged and promote equity.



5. Survey your students to understand their challenges.



You can also read about the study in the Cornell Chronicle:



Appearance, social norms keep students off Zoom cameras







Janani Hariharan interviews Dr. Corrie Moreau, Martha N. and John C. Moser Professor of Arthropod Biosystematics and Biodiversity at Cornell University.



Dr. Corrie Moreau



Dr. Moreau created a seminar class called Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in STEM in Fall 2020. This interview touches on her motivation to create such a class especially in the wake of the George Floyd protests of 2020, the structure of the class and her favorite moments of the class. She also shared some recommendations for other educators who might want to design similar classes at their own institutions.







Image of Mars NASA Rover Perseverance (Courtesy of SPIF)



And, to close out the show, Esther Racoosin speaks with Zoe Learner Ponterio, Manager at the Spacecraft Planetary Image Facility, also known as SPIF, located at Cornell. SPIF is hosting a watch party on Thursday, February 18 at 2:30 pm to view the landing of the Mars 2020 mission. To find out more about SPIF, visit http://www.cornellspif.com
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4 years ago
30 minutes 4 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 104: Frog diseases, one health, pandemics, invasive species

Esther Racoosin speaks with Dr. Kelly Zamudio, Professor in the Cornell Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.



A frog species that has been affected by the emergent pathogenic chytrid fungus.



Dr. Zamudio studies how emergent pathogenic chytrid (KIT-rid) fungi species are affecting amphibian populations in the Americas.



During the interview, Zamudio talks about how the principle of One Health is essential for both guiding the preservation of amphibian biodiversity around the world, as well as protecting human health.



Candice Limper speaks with Dr. Jody Gangloff-Kaufmann who is who is a New York State Integrated Pest Management program official.



Spotted lanternfly. Photo credit: Ryan Parker / NYSIPM



Gangloff-Kaufmann talks about a new bug in town called the spotted lanternfly, which is an invasive plant hopper that is native to China and likely arrived in North America hidden on goods imported from Asia. While this is a beautiful bug with all its spots and colors, it is posing a problem for some businesspeople in the local area. The reason for this is because it is eating plants such as those in the vineyards and orchards, which is not so great for business. 
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4 years ago
30 minutes

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 103: How water can affect our lives

Happy 2021! In this episode we discuss the most essential element on this planet: water.



But first, Kitty Gifford will start with her new segment: “Locally birding! From the birdfeeder to the skies. Look out and look up!” She talks about the gyrfalcon.



Gyrfalcon (source: Wikipedia)



We decided to have two different approaches. First, Aiden Mahoney interviewed Helen Cheng about living on the coast and thinking about climate change related events, such as Hurricane Sandy.



Hurricane Sandy (source: Wikipedia)



Water resources are often affected by agricultural run-off. Eric Bates takes us to a modern dairy farm to discuss what farmers are doing in the Finger Lakes to help the Cayuga Lake Watershed.







Producer: Mark Sarvary



Music: joelewisbass.com



Interviewers: Aiden Mahoney and Eric Bates



Locally birding segment: Kitty Gifford




Show more...
4 years ago
29 minutes 55 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 102: Best of 2020

“Frosty sunset” by dirk kirchner [www.unforgiven-art.de] is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0



Welcome to the final LSS episode of 2020!



Many of our listeners may be glad to say good bye to this difficult and trying year. However, Locally Sourced Science wishes to end the year on an optimistic note, by featuring clips of some of our favorite stories from the past year, and looking forward to communicating more great science stories in 2021.



Laurie Rubin (photo courtesy of L. Rubin)



Starting off the show, we recall Esther Racoosin’s interview in April of Laurie Rubin, a local educator who teaches students and the general public about how to observe, record and appreciate nature. With this interview, we also urge our listeners to get outside and enjoy the natural world in the coming year.



Link to Full show: https://locallysourcedscience.org/2020/04/28/lss-85-earth-day-edition/



——



Dr. Ana Maria Porras (photo courtesy of Dr. Porras)



During the COVID-19 pandemic, we discovered that it is incredibly important to use social media to communicate new science developments. Also, scientists strove to stay in touch with the general public in order to encourage them to learn more about important scientific topics.



One science communicator who remains very active on social media is Dr. Ana Maria Porras, a postdoctoral fellow in the Cornell University Department of Biomedical Engineering. She works in the fields of tissue engineering and the human gut microbiome. Porras posts information about microbiology in both English and Spanish on her two Instagram accounts, #MicrobeMonday and #MicroMartes. Here, we presented a segment of Smaranda Sandu’s interview of Dr. Porras, that aired initially on Sandu’s podcast, Tidbits of Research (https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/tidbits-of-research/episode-2-ana-maria-porras-qKtrs8Z_CRd/)



Link to Full Show: https://locallysourcedscience.org/2020/08/18/lss-93-research-amid-covid-19/



——



Dr. Avery August (photo courtesy of Dr. August)



The year 2020 was a watershed year of increased recognition of the #Black Lives Matter movement. People all around the world came out to protest the continuing mistreatment of Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC), calling for anti-racist reforms.



LSS began a series of interviews, highlighting the significant scientific contributions of BIPOC scientists. In July, LSS contributor Dr. Scarlett Lee interviewed Dr. Avery August, Vice Provost for Academic Affairs at Cornell University. He is also the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor and Professor of Immunology in the College of Veterinary Medicine. Dr. August talked about his current research, and his endeavor to increase the diversity of faculty at Cornell.



Link to Full Show: Show more...
4 years ago
29 minutes 59 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 101: Developing a New SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine; Expression of Host Cell Genes That Modulate SARS-CoV-2 Entry

In today’s episode, we continue our series of interviews with scientists who have decided to use their expertise in their respective fields to help further research into the biology of SARS CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.



Diagram of Outer Membrane Vesicles (OMVs) displaying expressed antigens (graphic courtesy of Dr. Matt DeLisa)







First off, you’ll hear Esther Racoosin’s interview of Dr. Matthew DeLisa, a Professor of Engineering at Cornell University.  For 4 years, his laboratory has been using bacterial Outer Membrane Vesicle (OMV) technology to develop a universal influenza vaccine. Recently, DeLisa’s lab has been using that to design a vaccine for SARS-CoV-2.



To learn more about Dr. DeLisa’s research, visit https://www.delisaresearchgroup.com/



———–



Display of Host Cell Gene Expression of SCARFs in Different Human Tissue Cell Types (graphic courtesy of Dr. Cedric Feschotte)



In today’s second interview, Esther speaks with Dr. Cedric Feschotte, Professor in the Cornell Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics.  Researchers in Dr. Feschotte’s lab study how mobile DNA elements, such as transposons and endogenous viruses move around in genomes. 



Following the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, he and post-doctoral fellow Dr. Manu Singh and Dr. Vikas Bansal of the Max Planck Institute in Tubingen, Germany, began study studying host cell expression of genes called SCARFs.  That acronym stands for SARS CoV-2 and Coronavirus-Associated Receptors and factors.   SCARFs include cellular factors both facilitating and restricting viral entry.



To learn more about SCARFs, visit https://cells.ucsc.edu/?ds=scarface



To find out more about research in Dr. Feschotte’s lab, visit http://blogs.cornell.edu/feschottelab/







Producer: Liz Mahood



Associate Producer: Esther Racoosin



Interviews of Dr. Matt DeLisa and Dr. Cedric Feschotte: Esther Racoosin



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions
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4 years ago
30 minutes 24 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 100: How Humans Perceive the Risk of Contracting COVID-19; Feline Coronaviruses

MTA Deploys PPE Vending Machines Across Subway System (photo courtesy of Creative Commons; MTA Photos; CC by 2.0)



In today’s episode, we explore how people perceive the risk of contracting COVID-19. We also discuss how humans can avoid passing COVID-19 to their beloved cat companions.



First off, you’ll hear Candice Limper’s interview of Cornell Professor Dr. Katherine McComas. She is a Professor of Communications in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and studies how people communicate about health, science, and environmental risks.



Dr. Alison Stout (photo courtesy of Dr. Stout)



In the second half of today’s show, you’ll hear Candice Limper’s interview of Dr Alison Stout, a veterinarian who is pursuing her Ph.D. in Virology. She is a student in Dr. Gary Whittaker’s lab in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the Cornell College of Veterinary Medicine. In the interview, Dr. Stout talks about her research on feline coronaviruses and how humans can avoid passing SARS CoV-2 to their pets.







Producer: Liz Mahood



Associate Producer: Esther Racoosin



Interviews of Dr. McComas and Dr. Stout: Candice Limper



Music: Blue Dot Sessions








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4 years ago
30 minutes

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 99: Lowering the Carbon Footprint of Mining Rare Earth Metals; Learning about and Finding Solutions to Climate Change





Post-Doc Alexa Schmitz (left) and MEng. student Don Flood (right) of the Barstow lab (photo courtesy of Dr. Barstow)



In today’s episode, we hear about a new technology that can lower the carbon footprint of an energy-intensive mining procedure. We also learn about the causes of climate change, and why the development of new technologies that keep carbon in the earth are so important.



To start off, Janani Hariharan interviews Dr. Buz Barstow from the Cornell Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering. Barstow talks about his research project that uses bacteria to extract rare earth elements in a clean, sustainable way. In this segment, you’ll hear about what rare earth elements are, why they’re important to us, what the current problems are in mining these minerals, and how Dr. Barstow’s team is working to solve some of these problems.



Hurricane Damage (left) and Signs of Drought (right). Images courtesy of Creative Commons (hurricane damage at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Tracking Drought by U.S. Geological Survey. Both marked with CC PDM 1.0)



In our second interview, Esther Racoosin speaks with Dr. Ingrid Zabel, Climate Change Education Manager at the Paleontological Research Institution in Ithaca. Dr. Zabel discusses the new exhibit at the Museum of the Earth (MOE) in Ithaca, “Changing Climate: Our Future, Our Choices”. A virtual version of the exhibit is currently on display at the MOE website, https://www.museumoftheearth.org/exhibit/changing-climate. The live version of the exhibit will open at the museum in late November. To make a reservation to visit the museum, go to this link: https://www.museumoftheearth.org/visit/plan-your-visit.







Producer: Liz Mahood



Interview of Dr. Buz Barstow: Janani Harihanan



Interview of Dr. Ingrid Zabel: Esther Racoosin



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions




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4 years ago
30 minutes 23 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS98: Effect of Urbanization on Evolution of Squirrel Coat Color; Science Communication Workshops

Gray (left) and Melanic (right) Morphs of the Eastern Gray Squirrel (photos courtesy of Creative Commons “eastern gray squirrel eating acorns” by Andrew Reding is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 and “Eastern Gray Squirrel, Sciurus carolinensis” by The Forest Vixen’s CC Photo Stream is licensed under CC BY 2.0)



—————



In today’s show, we speak with Dr. Brad Cosentino, Associate Professor of Biology at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, New York.



He is the lead researcher on a grant from the National Science Foundation to study how urbanization may affect the evolution of coat color in the Eastern Gray Squirrel.



Listeners can learn more about the grant by visiting this link: https://www2.hws.edu/hws-awarded-nsf-grant-on-evolution-in-cities/.



Citizen scientists (yes, that’s you) can take part in the study by visiting http://www.squirrelmapper.org



——-



Jason Chang and attendees of ComSciCon-SciWri2019 (photo courtesy of Jason Chang)



In the second part of the show, Candice Limper covers a recent virtual science writing conference held specifically for graduate students and post doctoral fellows who would like to learn more about science communication. She spoke with Jason Chang, a graduate student in the Cornell Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering, about the event, called ComSciCon-SciWri2020.



To learn more about the Com Sci Con, the Communicating Science workshop for Graduate Students, visit: https://comscicon.com/comscicon-sciwri-2020



——-



Show Producer: Esther Racoosin



Host: Jeff Pea



Interview of Dr. Brad Cosentino: Esther Racoosin



Interview of Jason Chang: Candice Limper



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions




Show more...
5 years ago
29 minutes 55 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 97: Plant Responses to Water Deficits; Harmful Algal Blooms





Sampling root exudates in the field (left); x-ray CT scan of poplar tree roots (right). Both photos courtesy of Dr. Taryn Bauerle.



In this episode of Locally Sourced Science, we explore two phenomena related to climate change that may have significant effects on our local environment.



According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, (https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/) Tompkins County and much of the Finger Lakes have been experiencing moderate drought conditions. Our first segment focuses on the ways that plants respond to drought. Esther Racoosin speaks with Dr. Taryn Bauerle, Associate Professor in the Cornell School of Integrative Plant Science, about her studies on how plants respond to stresses from water deficits.



Water body with algal bloom (photo courtesy of Dr. Katie Fiorella)



In our second segment, we hear about the environmental implications of climate-related increases of harmful algal blooms in different ecosystems. Janani Hariharan talks to Dr. Katie Fiorella from Cornell University. Dr. Fiorella was recently awarded a National Science Foundation grant to study the economic and health effects of algal blooms on human communities in Kenya. We also hear about local algal blooms in the Finger Lakes area, and what they mean for our ecosystem. 



In our last segment of the show, Candice Limper provides a short history of the Nobel Prize (https://www.nobelprize.org/) and a quick glimpse into this year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry, shared for the first time by two female scientists, Dr. Emmanuelle Charpentier and Dr. Jennifer A. Doudna.



————-



Show Producer: Liz Mahood



Associate Producer and interview of Dr. Taryn Bauerle: Esther Racoosin



Interview of Dr. Katie Fiorella: Janani Harihanan



History of Nobel Prize: Candice Limper



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions




Show more...
5 years ago
29 minutes 28 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 96: Juno Reveals Lightning Flashes in Jupiter’s Atmosphere; Third Grade Students Build Engineering Projects

Photo courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt.jpg



In today’s episode, we feature an interview about research on Jupiter’s atmosphere. 



Candice Limper speaks with Yury Aglyamov, a graduate student in the Cornell Department of Astronomy. He discusses his analysis of data from the NASA Juno spacecraft that reveal lightning flashes in the atmosphere of the planet Jupiter. Aglyamov is an author on a paper recently published in Nature, “Small Lightning Flashes From Shallow Electrical Storms on Jupiter”. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2532-1



Depiction of a simple bridge design and build engineering project (photo courtesy of “DSC06025” by Barrett.Discovery is licensed with Creative Commons BY 2.0)



Spencer Hill, 3rd Grade Teacher at Cayuga Heights Elementary School in Ithaca, NY (photo courtesy of S. Hill)



Later in the show, Esther Racoosin speaks with Spencer Hill. He is a 3rd grade teacher at Cayuga Heights Elementary in the Ithaca City School District.



After schools closed in mid-March of this year due to COVID-19, Hill and his colleagues, Kim Snow and Emily Graber, decided to continue to instruct their students to practice simple design and build projects.



Hill applied for a Red and Gold grant from the Ithaca Public Education Initiative to provide funding for the supplies for the projects. In this episode, he speaks about what it was like to instruct the kids to do these projects at home with their families instead of with their peers at school. To learn more about the Ithaca Public Education Initiatives, and their teacher grants, go to https://www.ipei.org/



Producer: Esther Racoosin



Interview of Yuri Aglyamov: Candice Limper



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions
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5 years ago
30 minutes

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 95: Exploring Asteroid Bennu and “Shelter In Space” at Home

“NASA’s OSIRIS-REx Spacecraft Arrives at Asteroid Bennu” by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0



In this episode, you’ll hear an interview of three Ithaca College students, Antara Sen, Robert Melikyan and Salvatore Ferrone, who are studying the asteroid 101955 Bennu. Their advisor, Professor Beth Ellen Clark Joseph, is a scientist working on NASA mission OSIRIS-REx that will be touching down on the asteroid on October 20, in order to collect samples from the 500 meter diameter object.



To learn more about the mission, visit: https://www.asteroidmission.org/objectives/



Zoe Learner Ponterio (photo courtesy of Esther Racoosin)



Later in the show, you’ll hear Liz Mahood’s interview of Zoe Learner Ponterio, manager of the Spacecraft Planetary Imaging Facility at Cornell, also known as SPIF. The facility is closed to the public right now, due to COVID-19. But SPIF is offering an exciting remote learning program called “Shelter in Space” that students can explore at home. Visit https://cornellspif.com/ to learn more.



“Bird Migration – Cape May, NJ” by Bob Jagendorf is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0



Today’s show starts off with an update about “2020 Migration Celebration”. The program usually is held on one day in September at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, but this year you can learn about bird migration during a two-week series of virtual presentations. To learn more, go to: https://www.birds.cornell.edu/home/visit/migration-celebration-2020/



Producer: Esther Racoosin



Interview of Ithaca College Students: Esther Racoosin



Interview of Zoe Learner Ponterio: Liz Mahood



Overview of Cornell Lab of O Migration Celebration: Candice Limper



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions
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5 years ago
30 minutes

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 94: Research Inspired by the COVID-19 Pandemic

In today’s episode, we interview scientists about new areas of research and exploration that were initiated in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.



Dr. Jennifer Surtees (photo courtesy of Dr. Surtees)



First off, Janani Hariharan interviews Dr. Jennifer Surtees, Associate Professor of Biochemistry at the University at Buffalo, and Co-Director of UB’s Genome, Environment and Microbiome Community of Excellence. Dr. Surtees recently sequenced dozens of SARS-CoV-2 isolates, obtained from the Erie County Department of Public Health.



During the interview, Surtees discusses how the SARS-CoV-2 RNA sequences reveal the geographical origins of the different viral isolates. You can hear about what SARS-CoV-2 genomes look like, how genomics can inform public health guidelines, and how to access a public database that contains information on SARS-CoV-2 strains from around the world.



To learn more about Dr. Surtees’ research, go to http://medicine.buffalo.edu/faculty/profile.html?ubit=jsurtees



Dr. Jason Guss (photo courtesy of Dr. Guss)



Later in the show, Esther Racoosin speaks with Dr. Jason Guss, a former graduate student of the Cornell Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering. Guss, together with fellow Cornell alum Dr. Apoorva Kiran, established Iterate Labs.



Iterate Labs initially developed wearable devices that could improve workplace ergonomic safety.  Now the devices are being modified to provide location awareness to prevent spread of SARS-CoV-2 virus in manufacturing workplaces. They also facilitate contact tracing when and if a worker contracts the virus. To learn more, visit https://iteratelabs.co/.



Today’s show concludes with an overview of the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability new rapid-response grants that are funding a variety of COVID-19-related Cornell research projects. To learn more, visit https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2020/08/cornell-atkinson-awards-250k-covid-research-grants.



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Producer: Liz Mahood



Co-Producer: Esther Racoosin



Interview of Dr. Jennifer Surtees: Janani Harihanan



Interview of Dr. Jason Guss: Esther Racoosin



Overview of Cornell Atkinson Center COVID-19 grants: Candice Limper



Music: Joe Lewis; Blue Dot Sessions
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5 years ago
30 minutes 1 second

Locally Sourced Science
LSS 93: Research Amid COVID-19

Dr. Kaylin Ratner (photo courtesy of Dr. Ratner)



In today’s show, we speak with a scientist whose research was upended by the COVID-19 pandemic. We also talk with a researcher who is using social media as outreach for scientists and the public who would like to learn more about microbial biology.



First, Jeff Pea interviews Dr. Kaylin Ratner, a recent PhD graduate in the Cornell College of Human Ecology. They discuss her study following a cohort of Cornell undergraduates that began their studies in 2016. She planned to survey the cohort at the end of their senior year, but these plans were altered after Cornell closed its campus due to the COVID-19 shutdown. One of her published studies can be found here https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2167702619829748.



Dr. Ana Maria Porras (photo courtesy of Dr. Porras)



Later in the show, you’ll hear Smaranda Sandu’s interview of Dr. Ana Maria Porras. Dr. Porras is a Cornell Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow, and a researcher in Dr. Ilana Brito’s laboratory in the Cornell Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering.



In the interview, Dr. Ana Maria Porras discusses her research on the gut microbiome. She also speaks about her use of social media as a way to promote science. Porras serves as a AAAS If/Then ambassador, which is a program that encourages young women to enter STEM fields (https://ifthen.aaas.org/).



This interview initially aired on Sandu’s podcast, “Tidbits of Research” (https://tidbitsofresearch.podbean.com/).







Producer: Liz Mahood



Interview of Dr. Kaylin Ratner: Jeff Pea



Interview of Dr. Ana Maria Porras: Smaranda Sandu



Music: Joe Lewis, Blue Dot Sessions
Show more...
5 years ago
29 minutes 58 seconds

Locally Sourced Science
Aired at *6:30 pm* every other Tuesday on WRFI (88.1 FM Ithaca, 91.9 FM Watkins Glen) “Locally Sourced Science” presents science explorations and events happening in the Finger Lakes Region. We feature interviews with local scientists, news updates about recent discoveries and a calendar of science events in the region. Volunteers who are scientists and science journalists produce our show.