Science That's Actually Interesting

Science does not have to be slow, dry or boring. Science That’s Actually Interesting explores science with curiosity, clarity and humour. Each episode takes a fun, light-hearted deep dive into topics from climate and environment to health, technology, space and human behaviour. Informative, entertaining and refreshingly human, this is science for curious listeners who love stories and want to stay curious about the world.

Episodios

  1. 19 FEB

    The Homogenocene: Why the World Is Starting to Look the Same

    What if the biggest environmental crisis is not climate change, pollution, or deforestation? What if it is sameness? Across the planet, unique species are disappearing, replaced by a handful of adaptable survivors such as rats, pigeons, carp, and humans. Scientists call this the Homogenocene, the age where ecosystems are starting to look the same everywhere. In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, Paul takes you on a fast-paced, eye-opening journey through the modern extinction crisis. We explore how human activity has reshaped the planet since 1950. Wildlife populations have dropped 73 percent in just 50 years. Vertebrate extinction rates are 100 times higher than historical norms. Insects, vital for pollination and food webs, are vanishing at alarming rates. From the isolated islands where flightless birds went extinct to rivers and oceans being filled with the same species, the story of life on Earth has become a story of homogenization. Protected areas act as museums of the old world, but even these are shrinking and vulnerable. When keystone species like elephants or migratory animals like grizzly bears decline, the effects ripple across ecosystems far beyond what we might imagine. But it is not all doom and gloom. Some non-native species can enhance biodiversity, and nature is resilient if we give it the chance. Renewable energy, sustainable farming, smarter fisheries, and connected protected areas can help. In some cases, scientists are even relocating species as climate zones shift. One thing is clear. De-extinction is not the answer. You cannot bring back a species without the world it evolved in. This episode raises a deeper question. Do we want a planet that is messy, rich, and full of life or one that is simplified, familiar, and biologically uniform? The Homogenocene is not coming. It is already here. The future of life on Earth depends on the choices we make today. Fast, fascinating, and a little unsettling, this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting will change the way you see the world and the creatures that share it with us.

    7 min

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Science does not have to be slow, dry or boring. Science That’s Actually Interesting explores science with curiosity, clarity and humour. Each episode takes a fun, light-hearted deep dive into topics from climate and environment to health, technology, space and human behaviour. Informative, entertaining and refreshingly human, this is science for curious listeners who love stories and want to stay curious about the world.

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