À propos de cet épisode
<p>Humans have been altering animals for millennia. We select the most docile livestock, the most loyal dogs, to breed the animals we need. This 'artificial selection' is intentional. But as Adam Hart discovers, our hunting, fishing and harvesting are having unintended effects on wild animals - the age of "unnatural selection". </p><p>This accidental, inadvertent or unintentional selection pressure comes form almost everything we do – from hunting, fishing, harvesting and collecting to using chemicals like pesticides and herbicides; then pollution; urbanisation and habitat change, as well as using medicines. All these activities are putting evolutionary pressures on the creatures we share our planet with.</p><p>Commercial fishing selects the biggest fish in the oceans, the biggest fish in a population, like Atlantic cod, are also the slowest to reach breeding maturity. When these are caught and taken out of the equation, the genes for slow maturity and ‘bigness’ are taken out of the gene pool. Over decades, this relentless predation has led to the Atlantic cod evolving to be vastly smaller and faster to mature. </p><p>Trophy hunting is another example of unnatural selection. Predators in the wild tend to pick off the easiest to catch, smallest, youngest or oldest, ailing prey. But human hunters want the biggest animals with the biggest antlers or horns. Big Horn Sheep in Canada have evolved to have 25% smaller horns due to hunting pressures.</p><p>Probably the best understood examples of unnatural selection are the evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. By using antibiotics we are inadvertently selecting the bacteria that have resistance to the drugs. The same goes for agricultural pesticides and herbicides.</p><p>Even pollution in Victorian times led to the Peppered moth to change its colour.</p><p>Adam discovers that our influence is universal; often counter to natural selective pressures and is rarely easy to reverse. He explores the impact on entire environments and asks whether we could or should be doing something to mitigate our evolutionary effects.</p><p>(Photo: Boxes full of fish at Billingsgate fish market)</p>
Écoute cet épisode en anglais pour apprendre l'anglais
Les épisodes de podcast sont l'un des moyens les plus denses d'absorber l'anglais au rythme natif. Our Unnatural Selection de Discovery t'offre des dialogues naturels, une parole non scriptée et du vocabulaire qui apparaît vraiment dans les conversations réelles.
Dans Clue, chaque mot de la transcription est touchable. Touche un mot inconnu, vois la traduction dans ta langue instantanément, et continue d'écouter sans casser le rythme.
Épisodes pour apprendre l'anglais
- The friendly virus 22 juin 2026
- The Life Scientific: Dean Lomax 15 juin 2026
- The Life Scientific: Helen Hastie 8 juin 2026
- The Life Scientific: Seth Berkley 1 juin 2026
- The Life Scientific: Hiranya Peiris 25 mai 2026
- The Life Scientific: Washington Yotto Ochieng 18 mai 2026
- The Life Scientific: Lucy Carpenter 11 mai 2026
- The Life Scientific: Jens Juul Holst 4 mai 2026
- The Life Scientific: Jim Ashworth-Beaumont 27 avr. 2026
- Inside Universe 25 20 avr. 2026
- Dark Breath 13 avr. 2026
- Superbugs: Resistance Rising Part 3 6 avr. 2026
- Superbugs: Resistance rising, part 2 30 mars 2026
- Superbugs: Resistance rising, part 1 23 mars 2026
- The Life Scientific: Jehane Ragai 16 mars 2026
- The Life Scientific: Tony Juniper 9 mars 2026
- The Life Scientific: Pierre Friedlingstein 2 mars 2026
- The Life Scientific: Julia Simner 23 févr. 2026
- The Life Scientific: Caroline Smith 16 févr. 2026
- The Life Scientific: AP De Silva 9 févr. 2026
- The Life Scientific: Eleanor Schofield 2 févr. 2026
- The Life Scientific: Peter Knight 26 janv. 2026
- Frontiers of Earth Science 19 janv. 2026
- Frontiers of Space Science 12 janv. 2026
- What is Quantum? 5 janv. 2026
- The Life Scientific: George Church 29 déc. 2025
- The Life Scientific: Gareth Collett 22 déc. 2025
- The Life Scientific: Sonia Gandhi 15 déc. 2025
- The Life Scientific: Mark O'Shea 8 déc. 2025
- Waking up with a different voice 1 déc. 2025