Sinopsis
The Molecular Plant Research Podcast
Episodios
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Dung is the correct place to be – reflective moss, Mark Spencer, beautiful plants
21/05/2021 Duración: 01h26minThis week, we’re going cave diving. Not too deep though, we still need a little bit of light to find a moss. We also talk plant forensics and about the cooles news in plant science.
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At the carp waterpark – biosensors, tracking carp, pseudopollen
14/05/2021 Duración: 01h30minOh Carp! Is it a new week already? We have another episode for you, this time talking about priming in maize, biosensors and carp science! Do you know whether carp can hear music? Tell us. We need to know.
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Power Plants – Vegetable Sheep, Joanne Chory, Microneedles
07/05/2021 Duración: 01h26minA new episode is here! We’re talking about a sheep made of vegetables in the mountains, microneedles on plant leaves and the amazin work of Joanne Chory.
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Blaukraut bleibt Blaukraut – new blue food dye, learnings from COVID, parsnip burns
30/04/2021 Duración: 01h09minWe’re blue, da ba dee, da ba dye – Our sauerkraut senses were tingling when we read today’s science story about a blue dye made from cabbage. Also: something we can learn from the pandemic and how to get burned by parsnips.
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CAPE FASHION – hipster coffee, Beronda Montgomery, SciComm for PlantSci
23/04/2021 Duración: 01h27minYour favourite tools are back to talk about some great science tools: a 28-page guide book for SciComm, DIY microscopes and the best AI-crafted pickup lines this side of the Mississippi. Also some actual plant science.
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Licked by a bee – pollinators, plants and pollinators (also pollinators)
16/04/2021 Duración: 01h27minA bumblebee’s tongue is not something we thought to discuss but here we are. This week, by pure coincidence, is all about plants and their pollinators. Follow the buzz, sip some nectar and come along for some plant science.
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The etymology of loot – extremophiles, subtraction bias, jargon
09/04/2021 Duración: 01h22minThis is technically still a plant podcast even though we talk a suspiciously long time about fancy words and worms. There is also a new favourite plant, an awesome researcher and cool new science from the last week or so!
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Building molecular Legos –ATP synthase research with Etienne Meyer
02/04/2021 Duración: 01h11minThis week, we’re welcoming our close friend Etienne Meyer to the show. Together with Joram, he just published a new paper on ATP synthase research and we take the chance to talk about it.
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Explosive Good Looking Salmon – lavender, antarctic exploration, lemurs
26/03/2021 Duración: 01h10minThere is a worm moon on the rise and we’re here for it. This week, we’re talking about the science behind lavender, the antarctic explorer Rosell Ocampo-Friedmann and our favourite bits and pieces from the last week.
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Mietschuldenfreiheitsbescheinigung – Feral crops, seed maturation, anti-Asian racism
19/03/2021 Duración: 01h10minThis week, we’re talking about a paper that looks at the internal selection processes happening within plants to decide which fruit makes the cut. Plus a number of interesting facts from the last days.
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Let the Whale Fall – headless sea slugs, pollen season, clever cuttlefish
12/03/2021 Duración: 01h16minThis week, Tegan found the truth about a song from 2012. We also discuss lots of plant and non-plant science from the last week or so. Did you know that cuttlefish are as smart as a toddler?
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I am kind of a time traveller – with Aly Baumgartner
05/03/2021 Duración: 01h58minWe’re super happy to have a special guest with us this week. Aly Baumgartner is a paleontologist with a specialty in paleobotany. With her, we talk about how to find plant fossils, how to analyse them and so much more about the fascinating world of plant based paleontology.
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MC Hammer is right about science – Nasturtium, Helia Bravo Hollis, icebergs
26/02/2021 Duración: 01h35minOn a week that exhausted us both we slowly descend into madness and conspiracy theories. This episode could be the last that you hear from us – but it won’t be. We talk about a cool genus of plants, Mexican botanist Helia Bravo Hollis and the right way to draw icebergs.
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Positive Adjectives! – Tomato transpiration, wild cotton, super-plants?
19/02/2021 Duración: 01h30minWelcome to another week of doomsday escapism. We bring you a cool story about transpiring tomatoes, wonder about wild cotton and are suspicious about road-side super-plants. And we ask: What is your favourite idiom that translates poorly into English?
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Joram and the curse of knowledge – gum arabic, homework, artistic AI
12/02/2021 Duración: 01h22minIt snowed! Well, not that you can see any of that, but we’re excited nonetheless. We’re also excited about this week’s topics: we’re talking about fabulous Acacias in Central Africa, the road towards more accessible science and a lot of homework that other people did for us.
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Bomblebees – TNT, Blue, Science Bots
05/02/2021 Duración: 01h03minThis episode is TNT (it’s dynamite) and it’s blue (da ba dee)! We got an email from a spinach that brought us to learn more about the material sciences of plants and we talk about lots of blue facts! Also: science bots!
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Plants, Pipettes, Periods & Parrots – Noble Rhubarb, Female Adventurers, Cyborg Fly Traps
29/01/2021 Duración: 01h30minThis week, we’re talking about noble rhubarb and an amazing story of a female adventurer, botanist and tavern owner, Jeanne Baret. Plus speculations about the moon, a lot of great inventions and a parrot who likes crisps.
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Hissing Blue Tits – Roots in compacted soil, crested rats, gribble
22/01/2021 Duración: 01h12minWatch out! It’s a snake! Or is it? In this week’s episode, we’re diving deep underground in the search for the reason behind stunted root growth and we talk about animals that pretend to be dangerous – and some that actually are.
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The ducks are anxious – the order of Cycads, Matilda Gage, Red Hot Chili Solar Panels
15/01/2021 Duración: 01h21minIn this episode, Joram presents not only a plant but an entire order of plants, mostly because he has no idea how plant nomenclature works. Tegan presents the life and work of two important women, Matilda Gage and Margaret Rossiter. Aren’t we two little overachievers?
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Don’t call it Moth-Paté – seagrass biofilms, fatty moths, fatty plants
08/01/2021 Duración: 01h25minWe’re back! After an extended winter break we return with a cool new paper and lots and lots of science fun facts somewhat related to plants!