Hey, radio lab listeners, Here's a message from our partner, IBM. 24 June 2012. You know, Galapagos was really isolated, barely any cars. Hey listeners, this is molly Webster. 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. A small business owner makes their first sale on Shopify. I can see the sea cargo ships going by and we have drones flying that are taking thousands of pictures of every angle of that bridge that no human could actually quickly process without artificial intelligence. What if everything has been changing all the time? I'm gon kill the person. Ornithologists have started to notice some new behaviors. It grabbed the goats dart, um, and then in a matter of minutes, snip snip did you do this? These are such alien looking creatures. Radio lab is supported by the john Templeton Foundation Funding research and catalyzing conversations that inspire people with awe and wonder learn about the latest discoveries in the science of well being, complexity, forgiveness and free will at Templeton dot org, 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! Transcription for Galapagos - Radiolab | PodScribe But I go up to him and I yell at him, who's your candidate and he said, I am a candidate? And then dropping to the ground, the last goat or two might sort of run into a area where it's impossible to reach. Our main story is the haunting tale of a chimp named Lucy. You mean eat the fly larva? 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. She first came to study tortoises back then. They get back over the island with this little device. Yeah, I mean powerful colors. That is the sound of a tortoise breathing. So his name is, he is a naturalist guide. And she told me that researchers recently did a survey of finch nest, four different species on two islands and all research groups found about 95% mortality in the nest, 95% of the babies were dead. But as they become rare and rare, they're harder and harder to detect. So whalers and buccaneers. And the medium tree finch is just a bit slower. What do they look like? Galapagos What if on these islands, thousands of tourists arrive every day carrying fruits and chocolates and souvenirs jumping from island to island. He says that when he first got to the Galapagos in the eighties, he couldn't believe that the place was real. She showed me her lab. At first I didn't know what that was happening but turns out it was an election and I was just really blown away that this Continue this procession for like 15 minutes. 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. We thought about the worst years ever and all through that listener support was one of the things that kept us going. R. i. You should actually get better with experience. You're saying this pinto DNA was on another island. It's like having a program on you over and over and over again, it gets worse. But a high school girls volleyball team is redefining what it means to play together. 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. And then you wait instinctively that loan go will go and find other goats. I'm just I'm robert Krulwich, this is radio lab in this hour. It has a terrible common name in english. You can go, I don't know the depths of the Impenetrable jungle, It's been affected by human activity. 23 Weeks 6 Days WebRadiolab Galapagos Podcast RESURRECTION (18:01) 10. Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip/80-80vq8sgb). No, we're talking about island by island over the course of about seven years. 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. 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. 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! The boys. It wasn't their fault. They've got to limit their catch. But that shouldn't really happen. Report for Radio Lab. So it's a lot. It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about special events. Follow our show on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org. He was on santa cruz Island having dinner with some friends and we got into chatting about tortoises and one of the people he's eating with says, hey, I was recently on pinata Island collecting snails and I saw this tortoise and I thought, do you know what you have done? What's that? That was a big problem for dire into power and then the islands come into sight. Are these finches disappearing very fast, Very slowly, depends on the species. Now most of these plants are actually probably harmless and you know like you said Galapagos national park they spend tons of money, tons of time trying to keep invasives out.
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