It's our thoroughly non-Christmassy Christmas episode, and the last Fuzzy for 2016, so we're talking about colour in nature. Why are animals colourful? How did yellow patterns come to mean "please don't eat me, I'm poisonous, I promise" and how did tricksters come to mimic those patterns for their own ends?
Eleanor is joined in the studio by Thomas, (a biochemistry PhD student with an encyclopedic knowledge of the natural world and a penchant for awful puns), and Mitchell, who was probably a dinosaur in a previous life.
Enjoy, and Happy New Year from Fuzzy!
Archaeology in PNG - Ben Shaw
Dangers of nuclear power - Tony Irwin
Good cells , bad cells
Tim Hollo - Australian Green Party
Rethinking economics and the limits to growth
Environment, nuclear weapons and the law
What does a bee see?
Heathy environment, healthy humans
The question of money
Australia Day Forum
Neoliberalism laid bare
Fossil economics
Bushfires, Plague, Food
CSI: Crime Soil Investigation
CO2 solutions
Ignobels 2021
The Geological Journey of Food
Michael Jennions - Behavioural ecologist
Taryn Laubenstein - Evolutionary biology and science policy
The joy of Gardening with Camilla
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
Museum of the Missing
Strange by Nature Podcast
Sasquatch Chronicles
Hidden Brain