the green room

Queens, clownfish and clicking plants

47 min · 15 de ene de 2024
Portada del episodio Queens, clownfish and clicking plants

Descripción

If Walt Disney’s “Nemo” was true to fact, we’re not sure how many kids would be watching. Clownfish have a complex social hierarchy. At the top of the ladder is a dominant female, who is larger and more aggressive than the rest. Just below her is the second-in-charge male, with whom she mates. Below that, subordinate males. All males.  How? Clownfish are hermaphrodites. Should the Queen pass, the second in charge rises to the challenge and transforms into a female. The next male in line happily slinks up the ladder to form the breeding pair.  Taking this to Nemo, we wouldn’t expect Marlin to tenderly take care of Nemo. Instead, Marlin would transform into a female (now his wife has died). Nemo, being the only other male present would become the second in charge. Leaving Marlin (or Marylin) and Nemo to form the breeding pair.  Speaking of wild things, plants make noises.  In March 2023, a study was published showing for the first time that plants create audible noise. This noise is about the same volume as our talking voice, but it is at a frequency outside of the hearing range of humans.  Researchers showed that plants made noises more regularly when stressed, i.e., water-deprived or damaged (30-50 times per hour) vs healthy (1 time per hour). AI was able to distinguish between noises from different plants and whether they were healthy, water-deprived or damaged.  It is not clear whether the noise is intentional or an unintentional side effect, something equivalent to a stomach rumbling when hungry. However, what is clear is that the noises hold information that could be interpreted by animals who hear within that frequency.  This raises a suite of questions never before pondered. How have animals (or even other plants) evolved to respond to the sound of plants? What would our human lives have looked like if we, too, could hear plants? What will we do with this new knowledge? As always, each episode is recorded live on air at the Radio Adelaide 101.5 stations on Kaurna land.

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10 episodios

episode Queens, clownfish and clicking plants artwork

Queens, clownfish and clicking plants

If Walt Disney’s “Nemo” was true to fact, we’re not sure how many kids would be watching. Clownfish have a complex social hierarchy. At the top of the ladder is a dominant female, who is larger and more aggressive than the rest. Just below her is the second-in-charge male, with whom she mates. Below that, subordinate males. All males.  How? Clownfish are hermaphrodites. Should the Queen pass, the second in charge rises to the challenge and transforms into a female. The next male in line happily slinks up the ladder to form the breeding pair.  Taking this to Nemo, we wouldn’t expect Marlin to tenderly take care of Nemo. Instead, Marlin would transform into a female (now his wife has died). Nemo, being the only other male present would become the second in charge. Leaving Marlin (or Marylin) and Nemo to form the breeding pair.  Speaking of wild things, plants make noises.  In March 2023, a study was published showing for the first time that plants create audible noise. This noise is about the same volume as our talking voice, but it is at a frequency outside of the hearing range of humans.  Researchers showed that plants made noises more regularly when stressed, i.e., water-deprived or damaged (30-50 times per hour) vs healthy (1 time per hour). AI was able to distinguish between noises from different plants and whether they were healthy, water-deprived or damaged.  It is not clear whether the noise is intentional or an unintentional side effect, something equivalent to a stomach rumbling when hungry. However, what is clear is that the noises hold information that could be interpreted by animals who hear within that frequency.  This raises a suite of questions never before pondered. How have animals (or even other plants) evolved to respond to the sound of plants? What would our human lives have looked like if we, too, could hear plants? What will we do with this new knowledge? As always, each episode is recorded live on air at the Radio Adelaide 101.5 stations on Kaurna land.

15 de ene de 202447 min
episode Culture, migration and silly history artwork

Culture, migration and silly history

We are asking a big question this week: How the heck do migratory birds know where they are going? Tiny robins travel thousands of kilometres over open oceans (with no landmarks), being pushed completely off track, and returning to the same nest every. single. year. On our journey to the answer of how they navigate, we take a quick trip through history and step into the mind of Aristotle.   Speaking of the non-human world, humans are not that special. We love to try and be special and differentiate ourselves from others – “only I can use tools”, “only I can communicate”, and “only I have emotions”. This week, we break down the assumption that “only humans have culture”. We explore culture in orcas (otherwise known as killer whales or alphas of the ocean) and how their thoughts have entered their bodies.

10 de ene de 202448 min