The Weird Biology Show podcast seeks to keep discussion of all things weird science alive. Here we will explore the strangest experiments that have ever been attempted in the field of biology and shine the spotlight on the most unorthodox scientific experiments you’ve never heard of!
Strap in, because it’s gonna get weird!
Latest Episodes
Find the latest episodes of Weird Biology Show here.
Announcement!
Your ole podcast dad, Shawn, is back with that gallon of milk and pack of cigarettes (Just like he said he would be!) …you know like 2 years later. It’s been a long hiatus, but I think we’re ready to start back up again.
You can subscribe to the show right now on Spotify and Apple Music! Then tweet with the #WeirdBioShow hashtag and tell all your friends (and loved ones or loathed ones) about our show. You can also follow the show on Twitter (@WeirdBioShow) and BlueSky.
Shawn, Dan, and featured guest , with Dr. Oné Pagán discuss Raffa and Desai’s 2005 paper on describing cocaine withdrawal symptoms in Planarians, and how getting flatworms addicted to cocaine could help us better understand addiction in Humans.
We also discuss , with Dr. Pagán's new book, Drunk Flies and Stoned Dolphins: A Trip Through the World of Animal Intoxication. Available everywhere books are sold Nov 16th, 2021.
This week’s Featured Creature is the Venomous Spurdog Shark!
Check out Dr. Pagán's new book, Drunk Flies and Stoned Dolphins: A Trip Through the World of Animal Intoxication. Available everywhere books are sold Nov 16th, 2021, as well as his podcast, The Bald Scientist Podcast. and find him on Twitter @BaldScientist
You can subscribe to their show right now on Spotify! Then tweet with the #WeirdBioShow hashtag and tell all your friends (and loved ones) about our show. You can also follow the show on Twitter (@WeirdBioShow).Source:Raffa, Robert B., and Prarthna Desai. "Description and quantification of cocaine withdrawal signs in Planaria." Brain research 1032.1-2 (2005): 200-202.
Shawn and Dan discuss Lowe & Goodman-Lowe’s 1996 paper about hammerhead sharks’ ability to tan. But is it all esthetic or does the ability to tan in sharks offer some evolutionary advantage? Listen to learn how these sharks get their summer bodies ready through tanning.
This week’s Featured Creature is the Whale Shark!
You can subscribe to their show right now on Spotify! Then tweet with the #WeirdBioShow hashtag and tell all your friends (and loved ones) about our show. You can also follow the show on Twitter (@WeirdBioShow).
Source:
Suntanning in hammerhead sharks Lowe, C., Goodman-Lowe, G. Suntanning in hammerhead sharks. Nature 383, 677 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1038/383677a0
This week on the Weird Biology Show Newsroom
Crows understand zero
mRNA vaccinations for HIV
The Intergovernmental pannel on Climate Change 2021 Report
Indigenous Water Protectors Vs The Enbridge Line 3 Tar Sands pipeline.
Shawn and special guest, Dr. Molly, discuss Radhika et al. 2016, and their recent paper aimed at using tongue prints as an alternative form of biometric data.
Shawn and Dan discuss Hopkins and Hopkins, 2013, and their recent paper aimed at understanding biological reasons behind the hobbits and the forces of good triumphing over the forces of evil in the Novel and Film, The Hobbit.
Shawn and Dan discuss Kriegman et al. 2020, and their recent paper aimed at creating biological robots from the stem cells of the African clawed frog!
IT’S ALIVE! No really, these are actual living organic robots! Sound like the premise of an insane Sci-Fi novel? Well, it basically is! Will these robots made of frog stem cells help further medical advances such as cancer treatments or will they hunt us all down like the T-1000?
You can subscribe to their show right now on Spotify and Google Podcasts! Then tweet with the #WeirdBioShow hashtag and tell all your friends (and loved ones) about our show. You can also follow the show on Twitter (@WeirdBioShow).
Source:
Kriegman, Sam, et al. "A scalable pipeline for designing reconfigurable organisms." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117.4 (2020): 1853-1859.
Featured Creature:
Glass Sponges!
Join Shawn and Dan as they discuss Pacifico et al. 2020 and their paper about killing Killer Bees with Crossbows in order to save an endangered species, the Lear’s macaw, in Brazil!
Join Shawn Rykaczewski and Dan Pinolini as they discuss the history of head transplants from the early 1900’s to present day!