Quirks and Quarks

Mar 1: The recipe for finding life on other planets, and more...

On this week's episode: big bird intelligence, astronauts should jump, sheep and human history, and a tiny great ape.

Big bird intelligence, astronauts should jump, sheep and human history, and a tiny great ape.

Three sheep on green grass look at the camera.
A genetic study of ancient sheep DNA found that as early as 8,000 years ago, farmers were deliberately selecting their flocks for the genes corresponding to coat colours. (MICHAEL MATTHEY/AFP via Getty Images)

On this week's episode of Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald:

Big birds with bitty brains are still kind of bright

We've learned a lot about the remarkable intelligence of birds like crows and parrots, but not much work has been done on large flightless birds. A new study that explored the problem-solving abilities of emus, ostriches and rheas suggests that some of these birdy behemoths have impressive cognition too. In a first-of-its-kind study, a team led by University of Bristol's Fay Clark trained the birds to use puzzles to get food, and they found that the rheas and emus were able to solve the puzzle easily, though the ostriches did not. The research was published in the journal Scientific Reports.

A bird behind a fence plays with a round puzzle attached to the fence.
A rhea attempting to solve a puzzle to get at a food reward inside. In the first study of its kind, researchers studied the intelligence of large flightless birds like rheas, ostriches, and emus. (Clark/Scientific Reports)
Cows jump over the moon — maybe humans should too

Researchers have done a lot of work to try and understand how astronauts can best prepare for and compensate for the muscle and bone atrophy that they will experience after long periods in microgravity. A new study, led by Marco Chiaberge at Johns Hopkins University, suggests that a workout that includes jumping might be beneficial. The researchers found that by training mice to repeatedly jump up from one level to another increased their knee cartilage thickness by 26 per cent. The research was published in the journal npj Microgravity.

A woman runs on a treadmill in microgravity, her hair is standing on end.
ESA (European Space Agency) astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti runs on the International Space Station’s T2 treadmill. New research in mice suggests that jumping might be a way for astronauts to strengthen their knees. (NASA/ESA)
Mary had a little lamb – 11,000 years ago

Sheep are among the animals that humans domesticated first, in the Middle East during the dawn of agriculture. A new genetic study of hundreds of ancient sheep remains, which date across 12 millennia, is shedding light on the intertwined history of sheep and humans. The work, led by geneticist Dan Bradley of Trinity College Dublin, tells the story of how the sheep's domestication not only gave us clothes but also milk and meat which fueled our spread around the world for thousands of years, and how humans molded sheep by selecting them for colour and wool. The research was published in the journal Science.

Sheep are seen in a snow covered field
The domestication of sheep provided humans with mean, protein-rich milk and warm, water-resistant fabrics made from their wool. (SANKA VIDANAGAMA/AFP via Getty Images)
A tiny great ape lived in Europe 12 million years ago

The tiniest member of the great ape family — the group that today includes the chimpanzees, orangutans, bonobos, gorillas, and us — has been identified from fossils found in Germany. Nearly 12 million years ago, the 10-kilogram animal would have shared its environment with another, larger great ape species, something researchers didn't think was possible. David Begun, a paleoanthropologist at the University of Toronto, said its two fossilized teeth and a single knee bone indicated that Buronius manfredschmidi had its own ecological niche high up in the trees. The study was published in the journal PLOS One

Two very different looking models of teeth that are white on the outside and black on the inside sit on a white backdrop surface.
These 3D prints of two molars, Buronius (left) and Danuvius (right), are different in shape and in the thickness of their enamel that would have allowed the two great apes to exploit resources in different niches in the same enviroment. (Berthold Steinhilber/University of Tübingen)
The recipe for finding life on other planets

In the last two decades we've discovered literally thousands of planets orbiting nearby stars. Our technology has now advanced to the point where we can investigate whether there's life on those planets. We speak to astrophysicist Lisa Kaltenegger, the founder of Cornell University's Carl Sagan Institute, about her work trying to answer that question, and her book Alien Earths: Planet Hunting in the Cosmos.

A book cover showing a blue and orange space photo in the background behind the title.
Alien Earths: The New Science of Planet Hunting in the Cosmos by Lisa Kaltenegger. (St. Martin's Press)