Go offline with the Player FM app!
A thirsty secret
Manage episode 339350717 series 3381564
We’re back from our holidays and we brought a big bag of plant facts from the last couple of weeks of plant science!
- Pollinators of the sea: A discovery of animal-mediated fertilization in seaweed | Science
- Improving photosynthesis and crop productivity by accelerating recovery from photoprotection | Science
- Uwe Sonnewald on Twitter about the paper
- Rethinking the retraction process | Science
- GMO chestnuts could save tree populations
- Ancient plastid genomes solve the tree species mystery of the imperial wood “Nanmu” in the Forbidden City, the largest existing wooden palace complex in the world
- Nanmu – Wikipedia
- Collection of native Theobroma cacao L. accessions from the Ecuadorian Amazon highlights a hotspot of cocoa diversity
- 15 years of experiments have overturned a major assumption about how thirsty plants actually are
- Humidity gradients in the air spaces of leaves | Nature Plants
- Toward Targeted Invasive Predator Control: Developing pH-Responsive Subcutaneous Implants for Native Mammals | ACS Applied Polymer Materials
- Poison Peas and the Australian Arms Race – Plants and Pipettes
All views are our own. If you want to comment or correct anything we said, leave a comment under this post or reach out to us via twitter, facebook or instagram.
Our opening and closing music is Caravana by Phillip Gross
Until next time!
Chapters
1. Intro (00:00:00)
2. Red alga pollinator (00:17:34)
3. Improved photoprotection for more photosynthesis (00:20:19)
4. Rethinking the retraction process (00:24:56)
5. American Chestnuts get new genes (00:37:30)
6. Nanmu (00:45:40)
7. The search for new chocolate (00:49:03)
8. The secret of plants (00:51:48)
9. Cat fact (00:55:35)
176 episodes
Manage episode 339350717 series 3381564
We’re back from our holidays and we brought a big bag of plant facts from the last couple of weeks of plant science!
- Pollinators of the sea: A discovery of animal-mediated fertilization in seaweed | Science
- Improving photosynthesis and crop productivity by accelerating recovery from photoprotection | Science
- Uwe Sonnewald on Twitter about the paper
- Rethinking the retraction process | Science
- GMO chestnuts could save tree populations
- Ancient plastid genomes solve the tree species mystery of the imperial wood “Nanmu” in the Forbidden City, the largest existing wooden palace complex in the world
- Nanmu – Wikipedia
- Collection of native Theobroma cacao L. accessions from the Ecuadorian Amazon highlights a hotspot of cocoa diversity
- 15 years of experiments have overturned a major assumption about how thirsty plants actually are
- Humidity gradients in the air spaces of leaves | Nature Plants
- Toward Targeted Invasive Predator Control: Developing pH-Responsive Subcutaneous Implants for Native Mammals | ACS Applied Polymer Materials
- Poison Peas and the Australian Arms Race – Plants and Pipettes
All views are our own. If you want to comment or correct anything we said, leave a comment under this post or reach out to us via twitter, facebook or instagram.
Our opening and closing music is Caravana by Phillip Gross
Until next time!
Chapters
1. Intro (00:00:00)
2. Red alga pollinator (00:17:34)
3. Improved photoprotection for more photosynthesis (00:20:19)
4. Rethinking the retraction process (00:24:56)
5. American Chestnuts get new genes (00:37:30)
6. Nanmu (00:45:40)
7. The search for new chocolate (00:49:03)
8. The secret of plants (00:51:48)
9. Cat fact (00:55:35)
176 episodes
All episodes
×Welcome to Player FM!
Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.