
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Lucy Cooke meets some of the animal kingdom’s nocturnal inhabitants to understand why it pays to stir once the sun goes down.
She examines some of the extraordinary nocturnal adaptations from the largest group of mammals, the bats, to the mysterious long fingered lemur, the Aye Aye, to hear why the dark has proved evolutionarily advantageous. In an increasingly crowded planet, could future survival for many diurnal animals depend on a nightlife?
Producer Adrian Washbourne
Picture: Honey Badger, Credit: Cindernatalie/Getty Images
By BBC World Service4.4
939939 ratings
Lucy Cooke meets some of the animal kingdom’s nocturnal inhabitants to understand why it pays to stir once the sun goes down.
She examines some of the extraordinary nocturnal adaptations from the largest group of mammals, the bats, to the mysterious long fingered lemur, the Aye Aye, to hear why the dark has proved evolutionarily advantageous. In an increasingly crowded planet, could future survival for many diurnal animals depend on a nightlife?
Producer Adrian Washbourne
Picture: Honey Badger, Credit: Cindernatalie/Getty Images

7,771 Listeners

890 Listeners

1,068 Listeners

5,475 Listeners

1,825 Listeners

1,807 Listeners

1,043 Listeners

2,070 Listeners

609 Listeners

765 Listeners

89 Listeners

405 Listeners

427 Listeners

829 Listeners

739 Listeners

227 Listeners

334 Listeners

362 Listeners

480 Listeners

242 Listeners

3,225 Listeners

755 Listeners

115 Listeners

1,044 Listeners