4.8 • 985 Ratings
🗓️ 23 August 2024
⏱️ 33 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Why do we have two eyes? Two ears? Two arms and two legs? Why is one side of the human body – externally at least – pretty much a mirror image of the other side?
CrowdScience listener Kevin from Trinidad and Tobago is intrigued. He wants to know why human beings – and indeed most animals - have a line of symmetry in their bodies. Yet, beyond their flowers and fruits, plants don’t seem to have any obvious symmetry. It seems that they can branch in any direction.
Anand Jagatia sets out to find out why the animal kingdom settled on bilateral symmetry as the ideal body plan. And it takes him into the deep oceans of 570 million years ago. Paleobiologist Dr. Frankie Dunn is his guide to a time when animal life was experimenting with all sorts of different body plans and symmetries.
Frankie shows Anand a fossil of the animals which changed everything. When creatures with bilateral symmetry emerged they began to re-engineer their environment, outcompeting everything else and dooming them to extinction.
Well... nearly everything else. One very successful group of animals which have an utterly different symmetry are the echinoderms. That includes animals with pentaradial - or five-fold - symmetry like starfish and sea urchins. And that body shape poses some intriguing questions... like “where’s a starfish’s head?” Dr. Imran Rahman introduces us to the extraordinary, weird world of echinoderms.
To answer the second part of Kevin’s question - why plants don’t seem to have symmetry – Anand turns to botanist Prof. Sophie Nadot. She tells him that there is symmetry in plants... you just have to know where to look! Beyond flowers and fruits, there’s also symmetry in a plants leaves and stem. The overall shape of a plant might start out symmetrical but environmental factors like wind, the direction of the sun and grazing by animals throws it off-kilter.
And, while the human body may be symmetrical on the outside, when you look inside, it’s a very different story. As listener Kevin says, “our internal organs are a bit all over the place!” Prof. Mike Levin studies the mechanisms which control biological asymmetry. He tells Anand why asymmetry is so important... and also why it’s so difficult to achieve consistently.
Contributors: Dr. Frankie Dunn, Oxford University Museum of Natural History, UK Dr. Imran Rahman, Natural History Museum, London, UK Prof. Sophie Nadot, Université Paris-Saclay, France Prof. Mike Levin, Tufts University, Massachusetts, USA
Presenter: Anand Jagatia Producer: Jeremy Grange Editor: Cathy Edwards Production Co-ordinator: Ishmael Soriano Studio Manager: Andrew Garratt
(Image: Orange oakleaf butterfly (Kallima inachus) on tropical flower, Credit: Darrell Gulin/The Image Bank via Getty Images)
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0:00.0 | Before you listen to this BBC podcast I'd like to tell you about something else you might enjoy. |
0:05.0 | My name is Allison Hindle and I commission audio drama and fiction for the BBC. |
0:10.0 | It's a great privilege because I get to unearth stories people love. |
0:13.7 | You should see the books and scripts covering my floor, |
0:16.5 | from new talent and established writers as well as classics. |
0:19.8 | The BBC has such a rich history of making great audio drama, |
0:23.7 | we're still the largest producer in the world, |
0:26.0 | and the popularity of podcasts means we can share what we do with even more people. |
0:30.8 | So if you like to lose yourself in a gripping audio drama or book, find your next listen on BBC |
0:36.5 | Sounds. Oh wow, this is a tuna, a giant bluefin tuna. |
0:44.0 | Hello and welcome to crowd science from the BBC World Service. |
0:48.0 | It can apparently grow to over three meters. |
0:50.0 | This one's definitely at least two meters. |
0:52.0 | That is an amazing skeleton. |
0:54.0 | I'm Anan Jagatia, and I am surrounded by a menagerie of animal specimens. |
1:00.0 | In a display case next to us here we've got a huge crocodile, about six |
1:06.5 | meters long scaling and green. I'm in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, the oldest purpose-built |
1:15.6 | natural history museum in the world. |
1:17.6 | Ah, that one's a nice one. Bush baby, very big eyes and a very bushy tail. |
1:25.0 | Inside, slender, intricately carved stone columns reach up to a vaulted roof of ironwork and glass. |
1:32.0 | Some very vivid bright green butterflies. |
1:35.0 | In fact, it's like a cathedral in here. |
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