
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A variety of malarial parasites have existed amongst the great apes for millennia. How did one of them jump species and why did humans became its preferred host? And from Antarctica we hear about a potential new treatment for malaria found in a deep sea sponge.
Also, why improved monitoring is changing our perceptions of earthquakes and the story of an endangered Polynesian snail.
Presenter: Roland Pease
(Photo: Gorilla. Credit: Hermes Images/AGF/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.5
319319 ratings
A variety of malarial parasites have existed amongst the great apes for millennia. How did one of them jump species and why did humans became its preferred host? And from Antarctica we hear about a potential new treatment for malaria found in a deep sea sponge.
Also, why improved monitoring is changing our perceptions of earthquakes and the story of an endangered Polynesian snail.
Presenter: Roland Pease
(Photo: Gorilla. Credit: Hermes Images/AGF/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

7,685 Listeners

897 Listeners

1,044 Listeners

5,433 Listeners

1,791 Listeners

1,794 Listeners

1,100 Listeners

1,923 Listeners

611 Listeners

764 Listeners

108 Listeners

72 Listeners

94 Listeners

962 Listeners

418 Listeners

417 Listeners

825 Listeners

807 Listeners

243 Listeners

355 Listeners

483 Listeners

3,185 Listeners

736 Listeners

112 Listeners