Watching a spiders’ heart beat, epigenetic ethics, and what science biographies reveal about fame

Watching a spiders’ heart beat, epigenetic ethics, and what science biographies reveal about fame

First up on the podcast, Online News Editor David Grimm shares a batch of fun stories with podcast host Sarah Crespi—from spider hearts racing when traffic gets loud to a disease-preventing house. Staff Writer Adrian Cho hops in to help discuss the possibility of black holes without singularities at their center. Next on the show, epigenetics has become a hot topic in pop science but the ethical conversation is not keeping up. The idea that parents can pass down epigenetic marks from environmental toxins or trauma to their children—without changes in DNA—has been around for decades but the research in people is lacking. Jackie Leach Scully, a professor of bioethics and director of the Disability Innovation Institute at the University of New South Wales, discusses where the research actually is and the concerns that may arise if such marks do appear to impact the young. Last up this week, we are launching our 2026 biography books series with books host Angela Saini and Science books editor Valerie Thompson. The pair discusses the difficulty of picking biographies and what can be learned about science, fame, and researchers as people from reading these types of books. This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy. About the Science Podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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How rat poison endangers wildlife, and using sound to track animal populations

How rat poison endangers wildlife, and using sound to track animal populations

Rodenticides are building up inside unintended targets, including birds, mammals, and insects; and bringing bioacoustics and artificial intelligence together for ecology First up this week, producer ...

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What’s new in the world of synthetic blood, and how a bacterium evolves into a killer

What’s new in the world of synthetic blood, and how a bacterium evolves into a killer

First up this week, guest host Kevin McLean talks to freelance writer Andrew Zaleski about recent advancements in the world of synthetic blood. They discuss some of the failed attempts over the past c...

4 Heinä 202431min

Targeting crop pests with RNA, the legacy of temporary streams, and the future of money

Targeting crop pests with RNA, the legacy of temporary streams, and the future of money

Guest host Meagan Cantwell talks to Staff Writer Erik Stokstad about a new weapon against crop-destroying beetles. By making pesticides using RNA, farmers can target pests and their close relatives, l...

27 Kesä 202449min

The hunt for habitable exoplanets, and how a warming world could intensify urban air pollution

The hunt for habitable exoplanets, and how a warming world could intensify urban air pollution

On this week’s show: Scientists are expanding the hunt for habitable exoplanets to bigger worlds, and why improvements in air quality have stagnated in Los Angeles, especially during summer, despite c...

20 Kesä 202432min

How dogs’ health reflects our own, and what ancient DNA can reveal about human sacrifice

How dogs’ health reflects our own, and what ancient DNA can reveal about human sacrifice

On this week’s show: Companion animals such as dogs occupy the same environment we do, which can make them good sentinels for human health, and DNA gives clues to ancient Maya rituals and malaria’s gl...

13 Kesä 202441min

Putting mysterious cellular structures to use, and when brown fat started to warm us up

Putting mysterious cellular structures to use, and when brown fat started to warm us up

Despite not having a known function, cellular “vaults” are on the verge of being harnessed for all kinds of applications, and looking at the evolution of brown fat into a heat-generating organ   First...

6 Kesä 202437min

Restoring sight to blind kids, making babies without a womb, and challenging the benefits of clinical trials

Restoring sight to blind kids, making babies without a womb, and challenging the benefits of clinical trials

Studying color vision in with children who gain sight later in life, joining a cancer trial doesn’t improve survival odds, and the first in our books series this year First on this week’s show, Staff...

30 Touko 202444min

Stepping on snakes for science, and crows that count out loud

Stepping on snakes for science, and crows that count out loud

A roundup of online news stories featuring animals, and researchers get crows to “count” to four   This week’s show is all animals all the time. First, Online News Editor Dave Grimm joins host Sarah C...

23 Touko 202433min

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