I think there's something about people that study animals. I have a friend who studies moths, and just watchs moths havi having sex for four years. And i am not going in that room, but it was like you describe, going into that spider room, full of cobwebs. The motrom was not good to which i will ask you. Have done some things for this book, hand in electric eel tank, we should at this point say, do not hand in any tanks. E what was your, i would say, favourite field trip or favourite kind of hands on spirits? Oh, um, so er, i had really a copp
What do bees sense in flowers? What do songbirds hear in each others’ tunes? And what’s that smell sending your dog running up the street? These questions and many more are the basis of science communicator Ed Yong's book, An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms Around Us. He is a staff writer at The Atlantic magazine and his coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic won the Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting. He's also the recipient of the George Polk Award for Science Reporting and the author of I Contain Multitudes, his previous book, which became a bestseller. Speaking with Ed on the podcast is Chrissie Giles, Global Health Editor at the Bureau of Investigative Journalism in London.
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