Learn Me Something

Learn Me Something is a podcast that celebrates our ignorance as the beginning of the search for truth. Every week we select diverse subjects outside our neurosphere. The intent is to learn and teach something, for all of us. Recognizing the evolving world we live in, our goal is to teach critical thinking strategies to enable us to see past falsehoods.

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episode 122: The Great Wild Indoors


Synopsis: This week on "Learn Me Something," Rich is missing in action, but Aaron and producer Alex Knight are here to talk about indoor biomes, an area that few biologists have studied.

Few biologists have studied the evolutionary processes at work in indoor environments. Yet indoor environments comprise approximately 0.5% of ice-free land area – an area as large as the subtropical coniferous forest biome. Here we review the emerging subfield of ‘indoor biome’ studies. After defining the indoor biome and tracing its deep history, we discuss some of its evolutionary dimensions. We restrict our examples to the species found in human houses – a subset of the environments constituting the indoor biome – and offer preliminary hypotheses to advance the study of indoor evolution. Studies of the indoor biome are situated at the intersection of evolutionary ecology, anthropology, architecture, and human ecology and are well suited for citizen science projects, public outreach, and large-scale international collaborations.

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Duration: 37:26:00

Present: Aaron Stewart, Alex Knight

Episode Links
  • THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY: CRITTERS THAT LIVE IN OUR HOMES
  • Evolution of the Indoor Biome
  • Trends in Ecology & Evolution
  • Evolution of the indoor biome - NESCent Working Group on the Evolutionary Biology of the Built Environment00038-5?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS0169534715000385%3Fshowall%3Dtrue)
  • The average house has 8,000 different types of bacteria and bugs
  • Should You or Shouldn't You Kill Spiders in Your Home?
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 October 14, 2019  37m