That's what I thought. To what cause was the demise of the Pinta tortoises attributed? And the goats that were out there were gorgeous, You know, they had curled horns, different coloured fur, just beautiful animals and they've been there for 500 years, some people were concerned with goats have their own if you will right to be there. Galpagos - Radiolab (podcast) | Listen Notes Doesn't matter point is an introduced species. They were having a meeting about this that's conservationist, josh Donlan. Yeah, judas codes. It, it's a combination of reasons on the one hand, fishermen have started to participate in the actual fisheries management more because it seems like they realize if they're going to keep their livelihood, they can't just fish everything out. And he told me that in the seventies and eighties lobster was fished all year round no restrictions. It's introduced found in europe north africa shouldn't be here. WebCommission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs. I think yeah, whatever bugs might have snuck out of the plane. But a high school girls volleyball team is redefining what it means to play together. Yeah, exactly. He wasn't curious. Thank you. That's. And what we'd do is we'd find a location as close as we could. School of Diagnostic Medical Sonography - Grady Health It's our new membership program and it comes with awesome perks, ad free listening, bonus, audio content, live events. Clearwater, FL, 33763. It wasn't their fault. Teladoc makes it easy to see a doctor right from your phone with 24 7 access to board certified doctors and were authorized, Teladoc doctors can call in a prescription to fill at your local pharmacy. You can buy it at home depot but there it is in the Galapagos and along this path just looking to the right and the left and then she just starts counting the number of invasive species at 1234 as you can see here, it's only right next to the trail but not so much for them. I've got my thing over here and you got your thing over there. Radiolab ' s first nine seasons (February 2002April 2011) comprised five episodes each. Subsequent seasons contained between nine and ten episodes. Season 15 began airing in January 2017. In 2018 the show's seasonal and episode format became obscured when online content moved from radiolab.org to wnycstudios.org. 179 years later, the Galapagos are So they choose not to breed. But Darwin didn't consider this possibility. Hello? So his name is, he is a naturalist guide. They learned that this sound means, so the goats start hiding so they're going to bushes, they won't move, They learn to stand under a tree holding their breath. And I'm like, what are you? She's a researcher at the Charles Darwin foundation. Thanks for listening. The tortoise is a tortoise is a tortoise. They might not be stupid ideas, but we still might not be able to do them. Howard Before We close. So that was my first experience. Listen 18 min The Political Scene | The New Yorker Corpse Demon We had just finished the honeymoon that morning. And this guy, he doesn't even say anything. This hour we take a look at what happens when we all try to live together. This story unfolds on one of Galapagos most northern islands where they also had to get rid of some goats. 14K subscribers in the Radiolab community. See do you just spell fulanis down? We don't think it was natural Gisella thinks it might have been the whalers. Radiolab They're like the size of jeez, I don't even know what their massive, they look like. On the other hand, you had all of these goats that didn't choose to be on the island. They kidnapped some people, including some of my crew and they even killed dozens of tortoises, slitting their throats. We only have a few days left to meet our financial goal. He was so joyful to have lost. And they're like, I don't know who the guy was, but it turns out he was the incumbent. And you could argue we're gonna have to get a whole lot better at making some very, very difficult decisions. So while we were in the highlands of santa, Cruz hunky took me through the woods to meet this guy named Arno. And basically when you have only judas goats meeting up with other judas goats, then you can say the goats have been eliminated, you're done A point, they got to at least on Isabella in mid 2006. I'm actually walking down Charles Darwin Avenue just kinda getting the lay of the land when all of a sudden this line of cars comes around the corner honking, endless honking and waving flags, blue flags. It feeds on flowers and we think decomposing fruits, baby flies, they're not vegetarians, they will, you know, blood. And then fishermen started making a killing fishing sea cucumber because there was this huge demand. It's keeping score. Outside of WNYC, I think This American Life does as well, and I know enthusiastic fans transcribed Serial. It's called scandia sharpie thing. And tortoises. And the medium tree finch is just a bit slower. But then one evening in March of 1972. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of. I was running as it turns out he speaks some english. And then everyone gets shot except the judas go, they let it go find more friends and then everyone gets shot except the judas go and then they do it again, everyone gets shot except the judas goat. You have to find all those other goats circle real low, you fly around them, round them up, try and get them in a single group and then They start picking off the goats one x 1 x one and they're actually videos online where you see these packs of goats running for their lives. Transcript of Fungus Amungus from | Happy Scribe This is Augustine Lopez's longtime fisherman. What if everything has been changing all the time? These females would go for more than 100 and 80 days. Oh yes. And Arnaud told me that this year small tree finches so far we had only two nests with fledglings and all the others were dead. And that's paul Watson, founder of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. That's our working hypothesis which brings us to her idea. What if in fact life is purely changed. I want this to work. Listen to keeping score a special series on the United States of anxiety wherever you get, listener supported W. N. Y. C. Studios way listening to radio. Yes, this fellow, he's a well known tortoise researcher. These bright yellow traps hanging from trees. We covered disability and access in a way that was totally new for us. Radiolab - Transcripts - Steno just a boom rod. We want to hit the ground running as we go into the next year and you've heard of the lab, we've been talking about it, we've been so excited about it. The story about the invasive Well they needed the goats because well yeah, there was a problem of people Because during the 90's these demonstrations started to happen, demonstrations of outrage, violent activity, constant conflict to explain. It would be lovely if we could find something like that because if they could find that chemical that love chemical that the flies used to attract each other, they could disrupt it, confuse the flies and screw up their mating. I hope you enjoyed the producer tim. List of Radiolab episodes - Wikipedia Is this the way that everybody who works on the tortoises thinks about it this kind of deep time. You can just take the best pinta tortoises you find and put those on Penta and you know over the next 200,000 years they will evolve into a pinto tortoise and it could be a bit different than the past pinta tortoise because evolution and mutation and all that doesn't occur the same. There's no place, no matter how remote we get, you can go to the North Pole, it's been affected by human activity. Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip/80-80vq8sgb). Yeah. Well, there's there's a couple of clues that say maybe, Yeah, for example, when you look in the nests, they seem to have fewer parasites and they seem to have more babies that survive 15%. He just kind of points. These five species, does that mean that they may go extinct in the next five years in the next 50 years? We thought about the worst years ever and all through that listener support was one of the things that kept us going. Well these are very purist sort of visions. Radiolab is supported by Simon and Schuster, publishers of The Codebreaker, the new book from Walter Isaacson, an exploration of Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Doudna and modern sciences efforts to cure disease, combat viruses and raise healthy children available wherever books are sold.
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radiolab galapagos transcript