Main content

Sun-tracking Sunflowers

Sunflowers following the Sun; The geological truth of China鈥檚 legendary flood; Robotic mudskippers; How whales hear

By manipulating young plants, scientists have finally worked out the mechanism by which sunflowers move their stems and leaves to face the sun. Starting in the east in the morning, tracking the sun through the sky, the plants make sure they get the most sunlight all day. And it鈥檚 all thanks to their internal clocks, their circadian rhythm.

China鈥檚 Great Flood
Geologists have provided geological evidence for China鈥檚 鈥淕reat Flood,鈥 a disastrous event on the Yellow River from which the Xia dynasty is thought to have been born. Marnie speaks with David Montgomery, Professor of Earth and Space Sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle and an expert on separating the fact from fiction with flood legends and myths.

How Whales Hear
Whales use more than just their ears to hear. Since their early ancestors first walked back into the water, the evolution of whale hearing and sound production has been fascinating, Dr Ben Garrod regales Marnie with facts about whale communication and evolution, including why toothed-whales have asymmetric jaws and can stun their prey with ultrasonic sound.

Robotic Mudskippers
Understanding the physiology and evolution of the early creatures that crawled, out of the primordial swamp, and onto land has been made easier with the help of robotic mudskippers. By replicating the locomotion in these fish, that use their fins to crawl, researchers provide insight into the first land-creatures on Earth.

Image credit: Ben Blackman/UC Berkeley

Available now

27 minutes

Last on

Fri 5 Aug 2016 14:32GMT

Broadcasts

  • Thu 4 Aug 2016 21:32GMT
  • Fri 5 Aug 2016 01:32GMT
  • Fri 5 Aug 2016 02:32GMT
  • Fri 5 Aug 2016 03:32GMT
  • Fri 5 Aug 2016 04:32GMT
  • Fri 5 Aug 2016 06:32GMT
  • Fri 5 Aug 2016 14:32GMT

Podcast