
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


We’ve all been there. You’re at the beach, you’ve opened up a steaming hot bag of fish and chippies, and before you know it a hungry pack of seagulls is crowding around you watching with malicious intent. In this episode, Shannon asks the pertinent question: why is it only seagulls, and not other birds, that behave this way? We also dive into the teeny tiny world of our soil’s mesofauna, as Kiri introduces us to the world-record holder for the most amount of somersaults.
By Radio AdelaideWe’ve all been there. You’re at the beach, you’ve opened up a steaming hot bag of fish and chippies, and before you know it a hungry pack of seagulls is crowding around you watching with malicious intent. In this episode, Shannon asks the pertinent question: why is it only seagulls, and not other birds, that behave this way? We also dive into the teeny tiny world of our soil’s mesofauna, as Kiri introduces us to the world-record holder for the most amount of somersaults.