48 min

Plankton In Our Time: Science

    • Histoire

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the tiny drifting organisms in the oceans that sustain the food chain for all the lifeforms in the water and so for the billions of people who, in turn, depend on the seas for their diet. In Earth's development, the plant-like ones among them, the phytoplankton, produced so much oxygen through photosynthesis that around half the oxygen we breathe today originated there. And each day as the sun rises, the animal ones, the zooplankton, sink to the depths of the seas to avoid predators in such density that they appear on ship sonars like a new seabed, only to rise again at night in the largest migration of life on this planet.
With
Carol Robinson
Professor of Marine Sciences at the University of East Anglia
Abigail McQuatters-Gollop
Associate Professor of Marine Conservation at the University of Plymouth
And
Christopher Lowe
Lecturer in Marine Biology at Swansea University
Producer: Simon Tillotson
Reading list:
Juli Berwald, Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Backbone (Riverhead Books, 2018)
Sir Alister Hardy, The Open Sea: The World of Plankton (first published 1959; Collins New Naturalist Library, 2009)
Richard Kirby, Ocean Drifters: A Secret World Beneath the Waves (Studio Cactus Ltd, 2010)
Robert Kunzig, Mapping the Deep: The Extraordinary Story of Ocean Science (Sort Of Books, 2000)
Christian Sardet, Plankton: Wonders of the Drifting World (University of Chicago Press, 2015)
Helen Scales, The Brilliant Abyss: True Tales of Exploring the Deep Sea, Discovering Hidden Life and Selling the Seabed (Bloomsbury Sigma, 2022)

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the tiny drifting organisms in the oceans that sustain the food chain for all the lifeforms in the water and so for the billions of people who, in turn, depend on the seas for their diet. In Earth's development, the plant-like ones among them, the phytoplankton, produced so much oxygen through photosynthesis that around half the oxygen we breathe today originated there. And each day as the sun rises, the animal ones, the zooplankton, sink to the depths of the seas to avoid predators in such density that they appear on ship sonars like a new seabed, only to rise again at night in the largest migration of life on this planet.
With
Carol Robinson
Professor of Marine Sciences at the University of East Anglia
Abigail McQuatters-Gollop
Associate Professor of Marine Conservation at the University of Plymouth
And
Christopher Lowe
Lecturer in Marine Biology at Swansea University
Producer: Simon Tillotson
Reading list:
Juli Berwald, Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Backbone (Riverhead Books, 2018)
Sir Alister Hardy, The Open Sea: The World of Plankton (first published 1959; Collins New Naturalist Library, 2009)
Richard Kirby, Ocean Drifters: A Secret World Beneath the Waves (Studio Cactus Ltd, 2010)
Robert Kunzig, Mapping the Deep: The Extraordinary Story of Ocean Science (Sort Of Books, 2000)
Christian Sardet, Plankton: Wonders of the Drifting World (University of Chicago Press, 2015)
Helen Scales, The Brilliant Abyss: True Tales of Exploring the Deep Sea, Discovering Hidden Life and Selling the Seabed (Bloomsbury Sigma, 2022)

48 min

Classement des podcasts dans Histoire

Secrets d'Histoire
Initial Studio
Franck Ferrand raconte...
Radio Classique
Au Cœur de l'Histoire - Des récits pour découvrir et apprendre l'Histoire
Europe 1
Le Cours de l'histoire
France Culture
Entrez dans l'Histoire
RTL
Storiavoce, un podcast d'Histoire & Civilisations
Storiavoce

Plus par BBC

6 Minute English
BBC Radio
Global News Podcast
BBC World Service
6 Minute Vocabulary
BBC Radio
The English We Speak
BBC Radio
6 Minute Grammar
BBC Radio
Learning English News Review
BBC Radio