This week the Natural selection say goodbye.. at least for now. In this our final episode, we touched on some of our favourite topics or subjects that we haven’t discussed in previous episodes. We learned about some extinct species and some species that have reappeared after being thought extinct. We got meta and investigated the world of memes both in humans and other animals. We also tested our knowledge with not one but two quizzes this week! Listen now to see if you can answer some questions related to our past episodes.
And Finally from everyone here at the Natural Selection, we would like to say a huge thank you to anyone who has listened to any of our episodes or shared our podcast with someone. To anyone who has gotten in contact with us, thank you it means so much to know people are enjoying what we do. We couldn’t have done it without you.
Thanks for listening and goodbye for now.
animals and subjects discussed in this episode include:
lesser spectral tarsier (Tarsius pumilus), also known as the mountain tarsier or the pygmy tarsier
Dusky Flying Fox (Pteropus brunneus)
Père David's deer (Elaphurus davidianus)
Megalodon (Otodus megalodon)
Simeulue hill mynas (Gracula religiosa miotera)
tree lobster (Dryococelus australis) commonly known as the Lord Howe Island stick insect
memes
Baron Franz Nopcsa von Felső-Szilvás
Chelicerata, Myriapoda, Pancrustacea/ Crustaceans & Hexapods
Thrips (order Thysanoptera)
Coleoptera - beetles
Lepidoptera butterflies
Hemiptera – true bugs
Hymenoptera – wasps bees and ants
Diapause
Rodents, mustelids, armadillos, marsupials, roe deer (Capreolus capreolus)
Quiz
Episode 9: parasites Ophiocordyceps unilateralis –fungus that makes ants into zombies –
Episode 13: metamorphosis
Episode 14: myths Animal paradoxa -
Including Antelope, Pelicans, Deathwatch beetle (make a ticking noise associated with impending death), Barnacle goose (believed to grow from rotten wood thrown out to sea) and shrinking frog or paradoxical frog (Pseudis paradoxa) as well as dragons, hydras, Borometz (plant like a sheep - might be cotton, such as in The Travels of Sir John Mandeville)
Episode 19: brains dung beetles use the milky way to navigate
Episode 28: fossils – coprolite- Fossil poo
brontosaurus
Ep 33: blood - Ocellated ice fish
- Horseshoe crab
Ep 67: blue - the mandarinfish (Synchiropus splendidus)
Blue poison dart
Ep 29: beetles – luciferin is a group of light emitting compounds that make fireflies and other bioluminescent animals glow
Ep 36: DNA - marbled lungfish (Protopterus aethiopicus)
The Natural Selection is back! This week we talk all about why The Ordovician blew a little hot and cold, why the great dying was great news for us, and which pigeon once blocked out the sun.
In this episode we talk about:
Common Sydney octopuses (Octopus tetricus)
jacobin hummingbirds (Florisuga mellivora)
Titanoboa (Titanoboa cerrejonensis)
Passenger pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius)
The Natural Selection is back, and this week we are talking all about beaks! Listen now and learn why you shouldn't squeeze pliers with jelly in your hands, how to calm down a goose, and which bird is better than a speeding train.
In This episode we talk about:
Flesh Flies - Sarcophaga similis
Avocets - Pied Avocets Recurvirostra avosetta
Oviraptors - Oviraptor philoceratops
Sauropods
Kingfishers
Cephalopods - Giant Squids, Colosal squids, Humboldt's Squid, Blue Ringed Octopus.
Geese - Anatidae, Anseriformes and the fossil Presbyornis
So, we had a technical malfunction this week with the recording, but our episode all about beaks will be back next week!
Until then, please enjoy this special out-take from a previous episode.
Join us as this week The Natural Selection Presents... Butterflies! (and moths). In this episode, we learned all about some beautiful butterflies and marvelous moths. We explored coevolution with flowers, dazzling displays, and some butterflies brought back from the brink of extinction. Listen now to find out more.
Thanks for listening and please like and share if you enjoyed this episode.
Species mentioned in this episode are listed below.
Mallards
Fruit flies
Anole lizards – lizards in the genus Anolis
Fixed front fangs -Taipans - snakes in the genus Oxyuranus in the elapid family
Crab eating water snake – (Fordonia leucobalia)
Lepidoptera
Queen Alexandra's birdwing (Ornithoptera alexandrae)
Painted lady (Vanessa cardui)
Morgan's sphinx moth (Xanthopan morganii)
Large Blue (Phengaris arion)
Red ant (Myrimica sabuleti)
European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
Silk worm (Bombyx mori)
Wild silk moth (Bombyx mandarina)
- The butterfly mentioned by Nabakov in the excerpt from Speak, memory Anarta cordigera
The Natural Selection returns to talk about Grasslands! Listen now and learn how to name a Gorilla, How high a bison can jump, and where to find a cheetah.
In This Episode We talk about:
News:
Giraffes
Dung Beetles
Microgastrinae Wasps
Theme:
Poaceae/Grasses - Wheat, Rice and Bamboo
Insects of the steppe and prairie - Beetles, ants, mites, springtails, flies and earthworms.
The Great Migration - Blue Wildebeest, Zebra
Grasslands of Iran - Asiatic Cheetah, manul cat, lynx, wolves, common fox, cape hare, goitered gazelle and Latifi's viper.
Sapiens: Homo Sapiens and wheat.
This week the Natural Selection were seeing red and exploring another colour we see all over the natural world. We discussed the IUCN red list and how it helps policy changes. We explored some brightly pigmented animals and some animals that have just gotten too much sun. Listen now to find out more.
Please like and share if you enjoyed this episode. Thanks for listening!
This week the Natural Selection found out it's not easy being green.. well not if you’re a mammal anyway. This week we talked all about the colour green and how and why some animals and most plants are green. Why aren’t there any green mammals? How does chlorophyll work? What is that green bird in Hyde park? Listen now to find out more!
Next week we're going to take a small break but we'll be back on the 3rd of August. Thanks for listening
The Natural Selection is back - And this week we are a bit blue. But don't worry, rather than being rude, or sad, we have found our favourite blue things from nature. Listen now and learn why you might put make up on a bird's foot, why the sky is not like the sea, and why a unique singing voice can make you famous.
This week The Natural Selection got tangled up in the complex world of food webs. From the global ocean food web to the complex biota in a termite's gut, understanding food webs is vital to allow us to recognise the impact we can have on them. In this week's episode, we explored why an ecologist was throwing starfish in the 60s and how wolves brought more songbirds back to Yellowstone.
Listen now to find out more. Please follow and share if you enjoyed this episode.
The Natural Selection is back - and this week we are talking all about Dinosaurs! Listen now and learn why T-Rex would make terrible podcasters, why Naomi hates Hollywood, and which 15 million years gets palaeontologists most excited.
Join us for this episode of the Natural Selection Presents… Bones! We got weird and wacky this week learning about manatee molars, the tiniest bone of them all, and what birds give up in order to fly.
This week's episode got deep as the Natural Selection explored the depths of the oceans. We discussed the challenges faced by the unique and bizarre animals found near the bottom of the ocean. From the aptly named "terrible-claw lobster" to giant squids we learnt about adaptations deep sea creatures have evolved. Marine snow, zombie worms, mysterious purple orbs, glowing gonads… this episode has them all! Listen now to find out more.
If you enjoyed this episode, please like and share!
The Natural Selection is back! Listen now and learn how to become a queen, why it might be useful to be 80% as big as a clown fish, and what finds their parents' skin… delicious.
This week the Natural Selection came out of their shells. We explored the wonderful variety of protective coatings and armour animals have, from snails to turtles (with the gentle giant glyptodon in between). Why did some cephalopods lose their shells? Why are bird eggs and reptile eggs different? Listen now to find out the answer to these big questions (and many more)!
If you enjoyed this episode, please like and share.
This week, the Natural Selection presents… marsupials! Listen now and learn which marsupial you might find in Antarctica, why opossums don't give birth through their noses, and which kangaroo didn't hop.
This week the Natural Selection talked about snakes. We explored how they move and interact with a variety of habitats from burrows to the air. We investigated how snakes differ from other limbless lizards and how they can reproduce in unique ways.
Listen now to discover more about these fascinating and often stigmatised creatures. Please like and share if you enjoyed this episode. For more content, you can find us at https://www.thenaturalselection.net/
The Natural Selection is back! Listen now and hear why aye-aye die, to better understand a panda hand, and whether you can (or should!) persue a kangaroo.
This week, the Natural Selection talked about the uncommon and the unexpected. Our theme was anomalies and we explored some unusual and rare plants and animals. From the strange and puzzling fossils of the Cambrian to snakes with legs, we discovered many things that are out of the ordinary. How do plants survive without chlorophyll? What weird body part is Nic talking about this week? Where on earth would you find a bunch of albino squirrels? Listen now to find the answers to these questions and more.
If you enjoyed this episode please tell a friend and like and share this episode. Thanks for listening!
Hello Listeners, The Natural Selection is back, and this week we are talking all about seeds. Listen now and learn why you might want to be eaten by an elephant, where the most biodiverse place in the world is, and what might explode if you touch it.