Okay, But... Birds

Okay, but did birds originate the open relationship?

35 min · 11. juni 2026
episode Okay, but did birds originate the open relationship? cover

Beskrivelse

E26. We borrowed a phrase from human dating and tried to pin it on birds. Turns out they never needed the rulebook. Dr. Wenfei Tong [wenfeitong.com], biologist and author of Bird Love, joins Scott to unpack what bird partnerships actually look like once you stop projecting our scripts onto them, from females who run the territory to males who guard their paternity in deeply weird ways. In this episode you'll hear about: * Why the drabbest little brown bird in the garden has one of the wildest sex lives in the animal kingdom * How a female calls the shots when she holds the better real estate, and what the males do about it * The cloacal pecking payoff you have to hear to believe All audio, video, and images in this episode are either original to Okay, But... Birds (© Okay Media, LLC) or used under license/permission from the respective rights holders. Bird media from the Macaulay Library is used courtesy of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as follows: * Laysan Albatross audio contributed by Ted Miller, ML117679 * Black-capped Chickadee audio contributed by Jay McGowan, ML202239 * Spotted Sandpiper audio contributed by Lucas DeCicco, ML516963 * Northern Jacana audio contributed by Gerrit Vyn, ML140224 * Red-necked Phalarope audio contributed by Bob McGuire, ML235440 * Black Coucal audio contributed by Myles E. W. North, ML3084 * Papuan Eclectus audio contributed by Thane Pratt, ML169808 * Red-winged Blackbird audio contributed by Wil Hershberger, ML249827 * Red-winged Blackbird audio contributed by Wil Hershberger, ML94215 * Red-capped Manakin audio contributed by David L. Ross Jr., ML57360 * Blue-footed Booby audio contributed by Robert I. Bowman, ML85906 * Greater Flamingo audio contributed by Myles E. W. North, ML2443 * Dunnock audio contributed by Niels Krabbe, ML249162

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af Okay, But... Birds-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

27 episoder

episode Okay, but did birds originate the open relationship? cover

Okay, but did birds originate the open relationship?

E26. We borrowed a phrase from human dating and tried to pin it on birds. Turns out they never needed the rulebook. Dr. Wenfei Tong [wenfeitong.com], biologist and author of Bird Love, joins Scott to unpack what bird partnerships actually look like once you stop projecting our scripts onto them, from females who run the territory to males who guard their paternity in deeply weird ways. In this episode you'll hear about: * Why the drabbest little brown bird in the garden has one of the wildest sex lives in the animal kingdom * How a female calls the shots when she holds the better real estate, and what the males do about it * The cloacal pecking payoff you have to hear to believe All audio, video, and images in this episode are either original to Okay, But... Birds (© Okay Media, LLC) or used under license/permission from the respective rights holders. Bird media from the Macaulay Library is used courtesy of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as follows: * Laysan Albatross audio contributed by Ted Miller, ML117679 * Black-capped Chickadee audio contributed by Jay McGowan, ML202239 * Spotted Sandpiper audio contributed by Lucas DeCicco, ML516963 * Northern Jacana audio contributed by Gerrit Vyn, ML140224 * Red-necked Phalarope audio contributed by Bob McGuire, ML235440 * Black Coucal audio contributed by Myles E. W. North, ML3084 * Papuan Eclectus audio contributed by Thane Pratt, ML169808 * Red-winged Blackbird audio contributed by Wil Hershberger, ML249827 * Red-winged Blackbird audio contributed by Wil Hershberger, ML94215 * Red-capped Manakin audio contributed by David L. Ross Jr., ML57360 * Blue-footed Booby audio contributed by Robert I. Bowman, ML85906 * Greater Flamingo audio contributed by Myles E. W. North, ML2443 * Dunnock audio contributed by Niels Krabbe, ML249162

11. juni 202635 min
episode Okay, but... boobies! cover

Okay, but... boobies!

E25. The blue-footed booby has become an internet personality: cartoon feet, a goofy strut, a name that practically begs to be a punchline. But Scott sat down with Dr. Carlos Zavalaga, Universidad Científica del Sur, and one of the people who first taught him how to study seabirds in Peru, and the "fool" reputation falls apart fast. Get a booby in the air or underwater and you're watching one of the most specialized hunters in the bird family tree. In this episode you'll hear about: * How six-plus booby species carve up the same ocean without starving each other out * What 20 years of GPS loggers, depth tags, and bags of fresh fish revealed about who eats what * Why El Niño, avian flu, and overfishing keep stacking the deck against these birds All audio, video, and images in this episode are either original to Okay, But... Birds (© Okay Media, LLC) or used under license/permission from the respective rights holders. Bird media from the Macaulay Library is used courtesy of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as follows: * Blue-footed Booby audio contributed by Robert I. Bowman, ML85906 * Red-footed Booby audio contributed by Robert I. Bowman, ML85911 * Brown Booby audio contributed by Gerritt Vyn, ML136211 * Masked Booby audio contributed by Chandler Robbins, ML32604 * Nazca Booby audio contributed by Oliver H. Hewitt, ML31543 * Peruvian Booby audio contributed by Ted Parker, ML29399

4. juni 202634 min
episode Okay, but what about birds that can't fly? cover

Okay, but what about birds that can't fly?

E24. Flight is the thing we associate most with birds, so what does it mean when a lineage gives it up? Dr. Scott Edwards, Harvard, joins Scott to unpack how flightlessness evolves, why it keeps happening across the bird family tree, and what the genome reveals about how a bird loses the ability to fly. In this episode you'll hear about: * How losing flight reshapes a bird's body, from feathers to forelimbs to that one famously enormous egg * Why the answer wasn't where geneticists expected to find it * What an extinct giant and a tiny tropical relative can tell us about where moa actually came from All audio, video, and images in this episode are either original to Okay, But... Birds (© Okay Media, LLC) or used under license/permission from the respective rights holders. Bird media from the Macaulay Library is used courtesy of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as follows: * Falkland Steamer-Duck audio contributed by Maurice A. E. Rumboll, ML4114 * Great Tinamou audio contributed by David L. Ross, Jr., ML57320

28. maj 202632 min
episode Okay, but can a bird really cooperate with humans? cover

Okay, but can a bird really cooperate with humans?

E23. Across sub-Saharan Africa, wild birds and people work together to find honey. No taming, no breeding, no domestication… just a partnership thousands of years in the making. Behavioral ecologist Dr. Jessica van der Wal, FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, joins Scott to unpack what's actually happening when a honey hunter calls and a greater honeyguide answers. In this episode you'll hear about: * What each side gets out of one of the only known mutualisms between humans and a wild animal, and why this bird in particular evolved to seek us out * The remarkable signal the honeyguide uses to communicate with people, and what playback experiments revealed when researchers tested it across very different communities * What happens to a partnership built over generations when one side starts buying honey at the store All audio, video, and images in this episode are either original to Okay, But... Birds (© Okay Media, LLC) or used under license/permission from the respective rights holders. Bird media from the Macaulay Library is used courtesy of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as follows: * Greater Honeyguide audio contributed by Jennifer F. M. Horne, ML55972 Additional media courtesy of Dr. Claire Spottiswoode and Dr. Jessica van der Wal

21. maj 202633 min
episode Okay, but can birds predict the weather? cover

Okay, but can birds predict the weather?

E22. Folklore says birds know a storm is coming before we do. Scott talks with Dr. Gunnar Kramer, Iowa State University, about what's actually happening when a tiny warbler decides it's time to fly, or time to bail. In this episode: * Why the question itself might be slightly wrong, and what's really going on inside that bird * A storm, some missing warblers, and a discovery nobody set out to make * What 300 birds falling out of the sky over Texas can tell you about how much fuel is in the tank Listen, follow, and tell a friend who’s a little superstitious. All audio, video, and images in this episode are either original to Okay, But... Birds (© Okay Media, LLC) or used under license/permission from the respective rights holders. Bird media from the Macaulay Library is used courtesy of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology as follows: * Yellow-billed cuckoo audio, Wil Hershberger, ML94446 * Barnacle goose audio, Bob McGuire, ML235525 * Golden-winged warbler video, Benjamin Clock, ML476422 * Blue-winged warbler video, Eric Liner, ML469433 * Yellow-billed cuckoo video, Larry Arbanas, ML466566 * Eastern kingbird audio, Wil Hershberger, ML534398 * Tennessee warbler audio, Wil Hershberger, ML85236 * Tennessee warbler video, Eric Liner, ML466381 * Wood thrush video, Benjamin Clock, ML471755

14. maj 202634 min