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Description
Saving Species on BBC Radio 4 explores biodiversity, conservation and natural history, both in the UK and across the globe. Joanna Pinnock, armed with a thermometer, visits a compost heap in Cambri...dgeshire to discover to her great surprise its temperature is way above that of her own body. Invertebrate ecologist Julian Doberski, himself armed with a microscope, shows Joanna how miniscule amounts of steaming compost contain a wonderous array of tiny critters, all thriving on the free heat generated by the microbes digesting the sugars in the compost. Here is, we discover, another example of how the little things in the natural world are responsible for turning around dead things and making them available to other wildlife. And we follow on this theme with a special studio guest who more than ever needs a warm living compost heap to successfully raise her young - the Grass Snake. Also in the programme how deciphering the life history of the Large Blue Butterfly is helping this very rare insect to increase its range in Southern England. And we hope to bring you the spectacle of breeding Stellers Sea Lions - the largest "Fur Seal" in the world with a special report from the Aleution Islands in the North Pacific.
Metadata describing this Open University audio programme
Series: Saving species; Series 1
Episode 20
First transmission date: 2010-09-14
Original broadcast channel: BBC Radio 4
Published: 2010
Rights Statement: Rights owned or controlled by The Open University
Restrictions on use: This material can be used in accordance with The Open University conditions of use. A link to the conditions can be found at the bottom of all OU Digital Archive web pages.
Duration: 00:30:00
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Producer: Kirsty Henderson
Presenter: Brett Westwood
Contributors: Miles Barton; John Croxall; Julian Doberski; Jim Foster; Joanna Pinnock; Sarah Pitt; Jeremy Thomas; Brett Westwood
Publisher: BBC Open University
Production number: PBS03010WZ0020
Available to public: no