Vagrant birds are those that appear in locations where they are not usually found. They might have been blown off course by a storm or have been affected by changing weather patterns due to climate change. Although a treat for birders, these visitors can also have a big impact on their new environments as Victoria Gill finds out when she heads to Burton Mere Wetlands on the Dee Estuary with Dr Alexander Lees, reader in biodiversity at Manchester Metropolitan University.
As former Prime Minister Boris Johnson gives his testimony, we hear the latest from the UK Covid-19 Public Inquiry with BBC Health Reporter Jim Reed.
A new study reveals that, contrary to a commonly-held view, the brain does not have the ability to rewire itself to compensate for the loss of, for example sight, an amputation or stroke. This is despite what most scientists believe and teach. Moreover, the assumption that it has this ability has led to all manner of erroneous treatments for amputees, stroke victims and other conditions, the study suggests.
We’re joined by the study’s authors, Professor John Krakauer from Johns Hopkins University and Professor Tamar Making of the University of Cambridge. We’ll also hear from one of Tamar’s key case studies, Kirsty Mason, an amputee from the age of 18 who advanced the scientists’ experiments exponentially.
Presenter: Victoria Gill Producers: Hannah Robins and Louise Orchard Editor: Richard Collings Production Co-ordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth
BBC Inside Science is produced in collaboration with the Open University.
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Northern white rhino preservation, Deep sea earthquake detection, Twitter's rare Heuchera discovery, Human roars
Hyabusa mission; ProtoDUNE neutrino detector; Caledonian crow skills; Koala microbiome
The Large Hadron Collider Upgrade, Voltaglue, Cambridge Zoology Museum, Francis Willughby
Antarctic melt speeds up, Antarctica's future, Cryo-acoustics, Narwhals
Dinosaur auction, Who owns the genes of the ocean life, Cancer immunotherapy
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CO2 and rice, Underground farming, Ancient interstellar asteroid, Microplastics air pollution
Face Recognition, ‘Thug’ plants, Cancer Funding Inequalities, Feynman’s 100th birthday
Rat eradication; elephant talk; the rise of the dinosaurs; physics of snooker
Antarctic, Kew, Paleogenomics, Sea birds
Human Consciousness: Could a brain in a dish become sentient?
Plastic-eating bacteria, Foam mattresses for crops, The evolved life aquatic, The Double Helix
Pesticides in British Farming
Stephen Hawking Tribute
Genes and education, John Goodenough, Caring bears and hunting
Data Scraping
Buzz kill
Russian Spy Poisoning
Weird Weather?
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