Science Friday cover image

Quercetin May Cause Red Wine Headaches | Worsening Wildfires Are Undoing Air Quality Progress

Science Friday

00:00

Quercetin and Red Wine Headaches/ Wildfires Impact on Air Quality/ Oldest Fossil Mosquitoes

This chapter discusses a new report that suggests quercetin, an antioxidant found in grape skins, may be the cause of red wine headaches. It also discusses how smoke from increased wildfires in the US has reversed progress in cleaning America's air and caused deaths. The guest, Rachel Feltman, provides insights on the study and its implications. In this chapter, they discuss air quality and its dependence on location and current conditions. They mention that if the air quality report for your area says it's safe, then it is. They also mention the impact of the recent wildfire season on air quality, which was particularly bad on the East Coast. The chapter then transitions to a discussion about researchers discovering the oldest known fossils of mosquitoes. They found two male mosquitoes with the mouth anatomy to drink blood, which is typically only seen in female mosquitoes. This discovery provides insight into mosquito evolution and suggests that all mosquitoes were blood suckers at some point.

Play episode from 01:33
Transcript

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app