Oh my God, he looks a little bit furry, Almost really tiny, vulnerable fledgling of a warbler finch. They got all the goats, not all the goats mean those judas, goats. You should actually get better with experience. Clearwater, FL, 33763. WebGalpagos - Podcast As our co-Hosts Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are out this week, we are re-sharing the perfect episode to start the summer season! At first nobody had any idea what kind of creature it was. More often, I'm Kareem Yousef and at IBM we use artificial intelligence to solve real world. Normally a female goat would be in heat for maybe a couple of days. But then along come the flies and all of a sudden like over maybe 20 years, these medium tree finch is they start to break their own biggest rule and they start to make outside of their own kind. Radio Lab is supported by Shopify, a platform designed for anyone to sell anywhere giving entrepreneurs the resources once reserved for big businesses. So where your values lie. (727) 210-2350. www.caahep.org. Here's the backstory. I met him at this pizza place the election had happened the night before and did he win? Yeah. So not only that, but according to linda, those goats, couple islands where they've been eliminated, fishermen have put them back. But what if simply putting your foot on the ground can completely transform a place hola back to producer tim Howard. This is radio lab. As our co-Hosts Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are out this week, we are re-sharing I'm not going to say it wandering jew basic house plant. WebRadiolab - Transcripts Subscribe 45 episodes Share Radiolab is on a curiosity bender. WebRadiolab is a radio program broadcast on public radio stations in the United States, and a podcast available internationally, both produced by WNYC. You've got. Uh but they ultimately were infertile. Why? She says if we keep doing that, taking the babies with the most painted DNA, breeding them together slowly. That's right. She points right next to it. James says they kept going back combing the island with highly trained toward of sniffing dogs. So anything you can do helps us thank you for listening and being part of this journey of telling all of these stories about our wild, crazy big small world. That's cool. They've got to limit their catch. The guy who wins, he spent $500,000. WebRadiolab is a radio program produced by WNYC, a public radio station in New York City, and broadcast on public radio stations in the United States. iTunes Overcast App Radiolab Page RADIOLAB Baby Blue Blood Drive Did you know that horseshoe crabs have blue blood? Yes. Even if they could for who knows maybe a million years. Created in 2002, Radiolab began as an exploration of science, philosophy, and On the other hand, you had all of these goats that didn't choose to be on the island. More information But then one evening in March of 1972. My name is Gisele. C studios. They're also seeing baby finches climbing up over each other just struggling to get away from the larva on the bottom of the nest and then they'll even start standing on the nest rim just to avoid being eaten. Going back. Just going to meet you at the airport. In fact says that it's actually in the same family as the regular house fly, but it's actually a boat fly called the Lorna's down. No, that's a that's a very specific trip. 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. But I mean in the bigger picture, you can make the argument that humans now affect every square meter of the earth. And the fishermen are like, who are you to tell me that I can't feed my family. All right on top of the cave, drop out one of the two shooters that was in the helicopter and he'd physically go into the cave shoe, the goats out or shoot them on sight. Report for Radio Lab. Image credits: Rene via Adobe Stock. We are dedicating a whole hour to the Galapagos archipelago, the place that inspired Darwins theory of evolution and natural selection. s Radiolab Interviews UCSF Researchers About "Life WebThe audio for this video comes from NPRs RadioLab - I do not own the rights to this. WebWe are dedicating a whole hour to the Galapagos archipelago, the place that inspired Darwins theory of evolution and natural selection. So I think there's been a change. Oh for sure. Radiolab Investigates Our Magical Organs Let's just take some tortoises from a nearby island and put them back on Penta. WebGalpagos - Transcripts June 24, 2022 Favorite Share Facebook Twitter Messenger WhatsApp Email Copy Link As our co-Hosts Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser are out this week, The story about the invasive We celebrated our 20th anniversary. What's that? Transcript. A given episode And he says he would go on these dives. So Gisella thought just by chance some of these tortoises are going to have a little bit more Penta D. N. A. Yeah. I'm surrounded by shelves and on the shelves are these tiny little plastic cups that are filled with flies. Susie Leuchtenburg is our executive producer. It's this totally wild, like I've never seen like this storybook, blue green, iridescent aquamarine and I'm thinking like, wow, this is gonna be like dropping into another world. There's no place, no matter how remote we get, you can go to the North Pole, it's been affected by human activity. Today we begin on a plane which carried our newly married producer, tim howard to the Galapagos. Our newsletter comes out I spent what two grand friend is The beginning is the beginning of a new a new future for the island. Transcript of Fungus Amungus from | Happy Scribe My name is, he's an ornithologist from the University of Vienna. This is the real thing. The whalers and pirates would often take goats that they brought with them and throw them onto the islands that way when they're on their way back and sick of eating tortoises, they could grab those goats. I've got my thing over here and you got your thing over there. So it's a lot. So when you think about trying to inspect the bridge and every pillar, you're talking about extensive amount of work. And you could argue we're gonna have to get a whole lot better at making some very, very difficult decisions. But compared to the medium tree finch is they are because the medium tree finch is were on the brink of extinction. She showed me her lab. Yeah, mother, mid eighties. But then I spoke with this woman. So you really only had two species left. Access powerful tools to help you find customers, drive sales and manage your day to day. So we we just sat in the forest and we would always quiz each other. Radiolab And really what that guy was specifically saying was don't be precious. That's charlotte costin. So how big a problem is this? So they called around offered huge cash rewards. He was their counter protesting and he says that at one point they went after National Park buildings and they were attacking the ranger stations with molotov cocktails. The adult fly is actually vegetarian. Scientists had to find clever ways to help the turtles on the island! Set up a little expat community and started breeding with the locals. But in the end there's just George that then shifted the focus on now what do we do? 179 years later, the Galapagos are undergoing rapid changes that continue to pose -- and possibly answer -- critical questions about the fragility and resilience of life on Earth. The flies spreading island to island. This is Radio Lab, and today elements. But when I ask charlotte what she makes of all of these changes, she said, I think probably too little too late. They might not be stupid ideas, but we still might not be able to do them. Thanks to Trish Dolman and screen siren pictures, Alex gala font Mathias espinosa. Really? One male tortoise, maybe 50 years old. So if you can better automate that and leverage intelligence to make sense. And so in 1994 we had what we called the tortoise summit in England and that was where we started the discussions about what are we going to do, experts came from all over the world linda says we want to get rid of the goats and many of them thought we were nuts and that it was impossible. Like the large ones. But then Sonia told me something really surprising. They were a little bit different depending on which island the finches lived on with the beaks. Mhm. Web9 1 Radiolab Podcasts and Streamers 1 comment Best BewareTheSphere 6 yr. ago A lot of WNYC podcasts do transcripts-- I know On the Media does. We found this on 13 islands. This hour we take a look at what happens when we all try to live together. She worked with him every other day or so for a few months and was never successful. That is the sound of a tortoise breathing. That's very similar to what I was picturing, But we land, we take the 40 minute bus drive, which turns out to be kind of a big town, tons of people live there like a fishing village, tons, no, it's way bigger than a fishing village and just let me say that my first hours in Galapagos were totally different than I was expecting. It does. You know, like nature in its purest form. They would crush you to death. And the thing to know is that even though these are three different species, they're actually really hard to tell apart visually. And wherever they went, they would lure those male goats out of their caves so that, you know, all in all over the course of this two year program, we had hundreds of judas goats out and using those goats, they were able to go from 94% goat free to 96 to 97 to 98. Seriously? By this point, I'm getting super excited and I'm thinking about Darwin and I start reading Voyage of the Beagle, his book on this nook that I had bought for the trip. Um they seem to have stopped, you know taking over National Park and killing tortoises. Oh, I'm never a Doubter. What you do is you sit at the back of the tortoise and first you have to get to where they'll allow you to touch them. One I particularly love is Radiolab, the NPR mix of nerdy science and audio bombast. Earlier this summer, its gregarious hosts Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich produced an episode entirely on the Galapagos Islands. We all know the Galapagoss role as a laboratory of evolution. Which should never actually happened because these are totally separate species. It's this on ending struggle. This is the villain. That was a big problem for dire into power and then the islands come into sight. James says a lot of tortoises. We only have a few days left to meet our financial goal. a short break. This is possibility powered by Shopify. The adult fly seems to be harmless. So that had acted as a barrier basically with goats on one side tortoises on the other. I hope you enjoyed the producer tim. Yeah, she's opening a box with some of the birds, that little benson is the finches. Another possibility is sterile insect technique sterilized male flies and introduce them back into the wild so that the female mates with a sterile fly and obviously doesn't produce fertile eggs. They introduced goats to Galapagos, but on islands like Isabella, which is this massive island size of Rhode island, The goats were actually penned into just little part of it Because there was this black lava rock that ran across the island, extremely rough lava that's extremely difficult to walk across 12 miles of it. This is the place where Darwin began to develop his theory of evolution and it's the place 100 70 year or maybe 280 years later where our producer tim howard landed wearing fishnets and a bad brains t shirt too fine to find a very different landscape than what Darwin saw. To what cause was the demise of the Pinta tortoises attributed? I'm Robert Krulwich. Transcript Same exact story that Darwin saw these processes that he described that just never ever stop. Sign up (https://radiolab.org/newsletter)! She's a researcher at the Charles Darwin foundation. So what if we took those tortoises and read them together, select them for the next generation. Not worse. And then dropping to the ground, the last goat or two might sort of run into a area where it's impossible to reach. I like to think of it as a kind of Darwin finch. And then fishermen started making a killing fishing sea cucumber because there was this huge demand. Galapagos RadioLab - YouTube My version was, is my dream of what it would be like as you land on and it's sort of like low grassy knoll and an enormous turtle comes by the one that you could sit on the top of it. And every once in a while one of these Hitchhikers slips under the radar and just wreaks havoc. 179 years later, the Galapagos Climate change seems to mean that a lot of species are Pretty much doomed, 30%, 40%, 50% of the species now on the planet in a few decades maybe disappearing. So damn case in point. Is a tortoise trying to get over a branch. She thought, God why can't I tell these finches apart? I want this to work. WebRadiolab is one of the most beloved podcasts and public radio programs in the world. Scientists first began to see this in 1997 when they started to find nests full of dead baby finches. 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. It is the end of our budget year. You had tons of sailors making these long voyages across the Pacific and Galapagos was the major ports on the whaling route where you come and get fresh water, but you'd also come in and pick up tortoises, land tortoises and you know, boats would take away several 100 of them often and turn them upside down and they can last for up to a year and a half in the hold of a ship like lying there, upside down, lying there upside down in order to make space for the tortoises. Lava flows are like 1000 sea iguanas taking a sun bath. 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. Yeah. Radio lab is supported by Teladoc. So whalers and buccaneers. And how far are we willing to go to return a place to what it was before we got there. WebRADIOLAB Galapagos Aired in 2014, this episode describes some of the challenges faced by the Galapagos islands to protect their local species. You know, on average 50% of your genome comes from your mom and 50% from your dad. This is Mathias espinosa and naturalist guide in the Galapagos and like linda. I would just I would have shot them first. Yeah. 23 Weeks 6 Days Super limited electricity. And these hybrid finches, are they doing better against flies? I'm robert Krulwich. It's introduced found in europe north africa shouldn't be here. But as far as I know, there are none for Radiolab. WNYC's Radiolab series tackles just five topics each season. Oh God, dad showed me this. It's our new membership program and it comes with awesome perks, ad free listening, bonus, audio content, live events. But that's four generations of tortoises, not rats. So you um you complete that with Isabella and did it work? This is to control the population. Yeah. Teladoc is available through most insurance plans and if you're not covered, you can still have access, download the app or visit Teladoc dot com slash radio lab. And the pinot tortoise went extinct. Alan Alda on the new yorker radio hour from W N. Y. 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. The interview originally from a podcast called The Relentless Picnic, but presented by one of Lulus current podcast faves, The 11th is part of an episode of mini pep talks designed to help us all get through this cold, dark, second-pandemic-winter-in-a-row. We just told you a story about how far humans are willing to go to protect something. Galpagos - Transcripts 2.2K views about 2 years ago 48:23 Love it or hate it, the freedom to A little black fly looks like every other fly. So nature has a boys now has the boys. And this brings us to our second school of thought, which in its most extreme version goes something like this. silly. So I took the plane from Kyoto. Yeah, I mean powerful colors. Now linda says in the end you don't actually need to do the full aggressive four generation breeding thing. It was a magical, magical area. This next part, it's about how far we're willing to go to get something back that we've already lost to restore a place in a creature to its wild state. But then she sees something amazing in that genetic data. You had plants re emerging, you had trees growing back and in a really short period of time. radiolab You just put your hands around. That was definitely not what I thought you were gonna say. Are these finches disappearing very fast, Very slowly, depends on the species. But according to Linda sometime in the late 1970s, the goats got brave. They sterilize them and put them on pinter. Hosted by Latif Nasser and That's our working hypothesis which brings us to her idea. But to give an example of the nature of this business that's josh Donlan, he runs an NGO that was involved in project Isabella. That's exactly how he sees it. And sometimes when they were done and the ship was filled with whale products, there's no room down here. The uneasy marriage of biology and engineering raises big questions about the nature of life. They blockaded roads. I started studying Darwin's finches in particular. And those are really interesting ideas, but at some point they're gonna get hungry and they're going to start eating all the other things that you know, you treasure, like the occasional tourists in any case after endless planning and meetings took eight years, I think they commence project Isabella. The new york public school system has been called the most racially segregated in the country. Howard Before We close. Start tracking the judas goat until they spot it with some other goats. Sony says each time she go into the field the song sounded like they were starting to blur together. 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. No, no, no that's not. And they're like, I don't know who the guy was, but it turns out he was the incumbent. But then at a certain point I noticed this one guy by himself standing on the sidewalk wearing a white shirt and jeans, he's waving a flag, but his flag is a different color. Yeah. And this is the place of course where Darwin landed in 1835. They throw a few extra tortoises overboard. Do you remember the song types? Miller and Latif Nasser are co hosts. So talked into the story of these finches is the story of Galapagos. The boys. You're not sad and he's like a friend. You know sleuthing adventure sonya and her team rounded up some of the birds. Plus with 24/7 support, you're never alone. Now the jury is still very much out on what will happen. Joint Review List of Radiolab episodes - Wikipedia The place that inspired Charles Darwin to create his theory of evolution, whose basic ingredients are lots of time, isolation and then constant change. I'm gon kill the person. But that's the only possible the first day. Yeah. They were going to do this big population studies. He didn't seem to like humans and maybe that's why he survived. 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. We use this technique called judas, goats. But here's the problem. She first came to study tortoises back then. I think it might have been the worst, We went up into treetops. She says there's actually very little known about the fly. WebWe are dedicating a whole hour to the Galapagos archipelago, the place that inspired Darwins theory of evolution and natural selection. He like points at the cars in front and behind as if like dude, seriously, you see how many of us there are. So carl kept mulling this problem, what would it take to basically make you know, the perfect judas goat. 1. So there are no people there. According to some accounts, they even hung them from trees. This is Augustine Lopez's longtime fisherman. It's a race against time. We talk about going from weeks to hours, two minutes, two seconds at its core artificial intelligence for me has always been about decision support. They take 39 tortoises raised in captivity and they use them as placeholders. That's what I thought. Darwins 5 weeks on Galapagos pushed him to develop his theory of evolution and thats also why when we think of evolution we think of the Galapagos and in Today, the strange story of a small group of islands that raise a big question: is it inevitable that even our most sacred natural landscapes will eventually get swallowed up by humans? journey, but that's the beauty of entrepreneurship. I just came in second. Listen. I'm the restoration Ecologist at the Charles Darwin foundation. The natural skied from the first chapter Who wrote this song, Peak Open Zone. This kind of eradication program was far beyond anything that anyone had ever done anywhere in the world Because it turns out they weren't just doing this on Isabela Island? Description Description I wonder how many years these guys have been here for. Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org. Doesn't matter point is an introduced species. But the interesting thing was from year to year it got more difficult. Can you imagine Schools of Hammerhead sharks like 500 800 passing in front of you like tuna. And if you think about it, we all have this, we all have this this picture of what we want to bring it all back to. It is about enabling the key actors, the bridge engineer to do their work more effectively more efficiently. Here's Kareem Yousef, the general manager of AI Applications at IBM, I'm standing on top of a suspension bridge, I've got a vast view in front of me. You can like see him pulsing, breathing. There's 100,000 of them, So many doubters, Carl says even heard the idea, why don't you put lions? WebRadiolab live "Apocalyptical" In the fall of 2013, Radiolab toured North America with an ambitious multimedia live show called "Apocalyptical." And that is how they go from 90% go free to 91 to 92 to 93 to 94. AMS159 Galapagos listening guide.doc - Nature and World The show is nationally syndicated And so what they decided to do is leave the judas, goats on various islands where they can live out their sterilized days chomping on grass, sharing war stories until such time as it might be needed again, is the, is the war between the greens and the and the fishermen and such, is that still hot and difficult And are they still no killing tortoises and they're not the fishermen. It's like a soprano saxophone and alto and a 10 or something like that. The tough question now is if we concede that we can't any longer save all the species, then does that put us in the situation of having to decide which ones will save and which ones we won't, And do we have any basis for making those kinds of decisions? She sees a small group of birds who have mixed up jeans hybrid cluster some genes from the small tree finches and some from the medium tree finch is what does that mean? Oh my God, there are these three massive tortoises just clustered together under a tree. It's like a biological rule about who you're not going to make a baby with. We are dedicating a whole hour to the Galapagos archipelago, the place that inspired Darwins theory of evolution and natural selection. Listen, wherever you get your podcasts, I'm john, I'm robert Krulwich, this is Radio lab today, a whole hour on the Galapagos islands. She took a trip to this island called Isabella, hiked up the side of a volcano and looked at all the tortoise country and it was an Impenetrable forest, basically tortoise heaven. 14K subscribers in the Radiolab community. But here's what they do know. There have been no tortoises there for 100 years. Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. And this guy, he doesn't even say anything. Hello? But that shouldn't really happen. I said it was impossible. It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about special events. Here we go. Radiolab: Galpagos on Apple Podcasts So I met this woman named Hanky Yaeger who is like a plant scientist. Our main story is the haunting tale of a chimp named Lucy. 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. 179 years later, the Galapagos are This is James gibbs, professor of conservation biology at the State University of new york, it's one of those islands, it's not part of any tourist visitation site. She's lived in Galapagos for over a decade. WNYC Studios | Podcasts TRANSCRIPTS We are working to provide transcripts for as much of our We are ascending and we have our dreams. I worked for island conservation and I'm based here in the Galapagos islands carl's actually the guy who showed me those tortoises, it was just a, it was a barren landscape, barren, barren grounds. We're not hunting but you know, looking for fourth day, I was there um I went to the island of floreana which Darwin visited and they're up in the highlands basically in the middle of this yard. Yeah. By the ocean of breath twice, I remember I carried your oxygen.

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