Our Changing World-logo

Our Changing World

RNZ New Zealand

Stories about science and nature from out in the field and inside the labs across Aotearoa New Zealand. Winner 2022 New Zealand Radio Awards Best Factual Podcast - Episodic

Location:

Wellington, New Zealand

Description:

Stories about science and nature from out in the field and inside the labs across Aotearoa New Zealand. Winner 2022 New Zealand Radio Awards Best Factual Podcast - Episodic

Twitter:

@RNZ_Science

Language:

English

Contact:

(04) 4741910


Episodes
Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

The 2023 Prime Minister’s Science Prizes: Communicating volcano science and sampling soils

5/1/2024
Meet two winners of the 2023 Prime Ministers Science Prizes. In the wake of the 2019 Whakaari eruption, Professor Ben Kennedy engaged communities with the science of volcano hazards – mahi that earns him the 2023 Science Communication Prize. Meanwhile, Future Scientist prizewinner 17-year-old Sunny Perry has developed a helpful soil map.

Duration:00:29:57

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Turning the tide – what it takes to take out rats

4/24/2024
Kate Evans visits a passionate team as they carpet a remote volcanic island in Tonga with poisoned bait, hoping to eradicate rats. What does it take to complete this kind of project, what are the chances of success, and what will it mean for the island’s ecosystems if they manage to remove the rats once and for all?

Duration:00:29:16

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Summer 34 – Three decades of albatross research

4/17/2024
Journalist Rebekah White meets two people who have been counting albatrosses on remote islands in the subantarctic for more than three decades. Their research shows that at least one species is en route to extinction. A few changes to the way we fish could save it.

Duration:00:29:27

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Taking on water - marine protection in Aotearoa

4/3/2024
New Zealand once led the world in marine protection. Now it looks like we will fail to meet our international promise to protect 30 percent of our ocean estate by 2030. Why is stopping fishing so politically fraught? How might our ideas about marine protection need to change? And why, when our seas are in need, is it taking us so long to learn to talk to each other?

Duration:00:30:51

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

A tale of two islands – erect-crested penguins

3/27/2024
The Bounty Islands are tiny in terms of area – just some bits of granite jutting out of the ocean. But they are huge in terms of seabirds. James Frankham joins a team researching the erect-crested penguins who breed in this remote archipelago. Recent counts suggest the penguins of the Bounties are doing fine. But this is not the case on the Antipodes Islands, and the researchers desperately want to know why.

Duration:00:28:00

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

The mystery of how godwits sleep in flight

3/27/2024
Kuaka bar-tailed godwits make the longest non-stop flights, and researchers are using hi-tech tags to solve the mystery of how and when they sleep.

Duration:00:26:35

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

The stuff of life - Carbon capture in our ocean ecosystems

3/20/2024
What roles do our ocean ecosystems play in capturing carbon? Kate Evans speaks to iwi Māori working to improve the health of an estuary in the Bay of Plenty, and to scientists studying the fiords of New Zealand’s southwest coast. There’s potential for huge amounts of carbon to be locked away, if we don’t mess it up.

Duration:00:32:00

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Fish out of water - How to grow fish on land

3/13/2024
People and livestock gobble so much fish that the seas soon won’t keep up. Is the answer to grow fish on land? Kate Evans meets scientists figuring out the puzzles of how to farm some of New Zealand’s iconic ocean creatures.

Duration:00:32:33

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Kina-nomics - The kina are taking over, what can we do?

3/6/2024
Kina numbers are exploding on some of our reefs, decimating seaweed habitats. Could this problem be solved by eating them? Kate Evans investigates the potential of kina-nomics.

Duration:00:28:22

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

The undersea orchestra - Ocean sounds and what they tell us

2/28/2024
Crackle, pop, woof, crunch, click. In the ocean, an undersea orchestra is in full swing. Journalist Kate Evans discovers who’s playing in it and why, and what happens when human noise drowns out this symphony in the sea.

Duration:00:31:13

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Watching the weather in the far southern seas

2/21/2024
A group of young New Zealanders and two meteorologists travel to South Georgia Island in the southern Atlantic Ocean to collect weather observations – continuing the scientific legacy of early Antarctic explorers like Shackleton.

Duration:00:30:18

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

New Zealand’s Antipodes Islands – remote, wild, and special

2/14/2024
An ambitious project to rid the remote Antipodes Island of introduced mice proved successful in 2018. Claire Concannon visits the spectacular subantarctic island to meet the locals – from penguins to megaherbs – and the people studying the wildlife. Plus, we learn about what's at stake in the next island eradication challenge for New Zealand.

Duration:00:35:44

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Our Changing World – Drilling into Antarctic ice

2/6/2024
How fast - and how completely - could Antarctica’s smaller western ice sheet melt in a warming world? An international science team, led by New Zealand, set out to investigate whether two degrees of warming could already be a tipping point for the frozen continent.

Duration:00:13:44

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Pollen, asthma and allergies

1/31/2024
Allergenic pollen is a big trigger for New Zealand’s high rates of hay fever and asthma. But for 35 years, we’ve had no current data on pollen levels. Until now. Justin Gregory talks to a team who want to change that.

Duration:00:29:41

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Restoring Wellington’s seaweed forests

1/24/2024
Giant kelp is disappearing from Wellington Harbour. Love Rimurimu is aiming to restore lush underwater kelp forests with an ambitious and collaborative replanting effort. Claire Concannon dives in to the wonderful world of seaweeds.

Duration:00:29:49

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Summer science: AI and medicinal cannabis

1/17/2024
In the final instalment of the summer science series, science communication students tackle two controversial topics: medicinal cannabis, and AI consciousness.

Duration:00:28:15

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Summer science: Hybrid wildlife and mātauranga Māori

1/10/2024
Should we intervene to prevent hybridisation between an endangered species and its common relative? In this week's summer science episode, two students from the Department of Science Communication at the University of Otago tell stories of science controversy: the conservation conundrum of hybrids, and the relationship between western science and mātauranga Māori.

Duration:00:25:34

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Summer science: Kākā in Wellington

1/3/2024
Kākā numbers are skyrocketing in Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington thanks to conservation efforts. The summer science series continues with a walk through Zealandia to find out why you shouldn't feed these inquisitive parrots.

Duration:00:12:30

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Summer science: Seabirds in Auckland

1/3/2024
The summer science fun continues with an episode from RNZ podcast Voices. Meet Gaia Dell'Arriccia, a scientist originally from the south of France who studies the seabirds that live around Auckland's coastlines.

Duration:00:14:50

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Summer science: Death rays and radio inventions

12/27/2023
The summer science series kicks off with an episode from award-winning podcast Black Sheep, about a backyard inventor called Victor Penny who sparked sensational headlines about death ray inventions in 1935.

Duration:00:53:03