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De schoonouders van Chris (Martine en Fred) wonen in een huis waarin sinds 1932 weinig is veranderd. En dus staat er in de keuken nog een werkende ijskast uit 1932. Waarschijnlijk is het de oudste nog werkende ijskast van Nederland. Samen met Martine bekijkt Chris de keuken en de ijskast. En tussendoor zoekt hij uit hoe de mens de afgelopen eeuwen voor gekoelde ruimtes zorgde. Van de Romeinen tot nu. Wil je misschien gaan autodelen kijk dan op deze link van het Ministerie van Infrastructuur en Waterstaat.Reacties: manmetdemicrofoon@gmail.comDit is het Instagram-account van Man met de microfoon.Wil je lid worden of een eenmalige donatie doen via petjeaf.com dan kan dat: hierEenmalig overmaken kan ook naar: NL37 INGB 0006 8785 94 van Stichting Man met de microfoon te Amsterdam.Wil je adverteren, dan kun je een mailtje sturen naar: adverteren@dagennacht.nlZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This week on the show, we go wild for bush tomatoes! I speak with an incredible crew of botanists and an anthropologist who share their work in studying a sweet relative of the tomato that grows in the Western Desert of Australia in lands managed by the Martu People with controlled burns. We cover topics of flavor, population genetics, and tales from the field! You can learn more about this project in a new film featured on the “Plants are cool, too!” YouTube Channel. #tomato #solanum #Australia #explore #WildFoods
Tanisha Williams, Richard E. and Yvonne Smith Post-Doctoral Fellow in Botany, Department of Biology, Bucknell University and Chris Martine, PhD, David Burpee Professor of Plant Genetics and Research, Chair, Department of Biology, Director, Manning Herbarium, Fellow - Linnean Society, Chair, Division of Botany: Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB)… Guests will have a full update on their work and research. We'll ask Tanisha about her discoveries/research, the new tomato, #BlackBotanists, and other topics. Chris can tell us about his discoveries/research, the new tomato, PACT and other topics.
In Today's episode, Clay interviews Dr. Chris Martine, a David Burpee Professor in Plant Genetics & Research Biology Department Chair at Bucknell University. Dr. Martine is a biodiversity scientist with a particular focus on plants, especially the ecology and evolution of plant reproduction. Much of his work has been in the plant family Solanaceae, including more than a decade looking into the unusual breeding systems of the genus Solanum in northern Australia through a combination of field studies and molecular phylogenetics.Dr. Martine shares what it's like to study the world of Biodiversity, how to get involved, what Bucknell has to offer and so much more. Please be sure to check out his incredible Youtube series "Plants Are Cool, Too"!Plants Are Cool Too: https://www.youtube.com/user/PlantsAreCoolToo Follow on Twitter @MartineBotany
For this Holiday Weekend, hear the year of the #BLTrees series in two days. Today, November 2021's kick-off through the May check-in. Listeners were invited to pick a tree and follow it through the year as we checked in every month with Marielle Anzelone, botanist and founder of NYC Wildflower Week (.org), who proposed the series, and a different guest each month: November: Chris Martine, professor of Plant Genetics and Research at Bucknell University, YouTube host of "Plants are Cool Too!", and the co-author of Trees of New Jersey and the Mid-Atlantic States, who explains what defines a tree. December: Regina Alvarez, assistant professor of biology at Dominican College and former director of Urban Horticulture and Woodland Management at the Central Park Conservancy, who explains what's happening with the trees in winter. January: Ming Kuo, psychologist and associate professor of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences and the director of The Landscape and Human Health Laboratory at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, who talks about how trees have been shown to contribute to human health and well-being. February: Myla Aronson, professor in the Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources department at Rutgers University, director of the Hutcheson Memorial Forest, one of the last remaining old growth forests in New Jersey, and co-director of Urban Biodiversity Research Coordination Network (UrBioNet), explains what makes a "forest" beyond a group of trees. March: Georgia Silvera Seamans, director of the Washington Square Park Eco Projects, founder of Local Nature Lab and a member of the #BlackBotanistsWeek organizing committee, explains what's happening with trees in spring. April: Jennifer Greenfeld, New York City Parks assistant commissioner for forestry, horticulture, and natural resources, talks about the care of street trees. May: Desiree Narango, a conservation scientist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst working in collaboration with the U.S. Forest Service, talks about the relationship of birds and trees, at the height of the spring migration. NOTE: These interviews were lightly edited for time and clarity; the original web versions are available through the #BLTrees series page.
In Today's episode, Clay interviews Dr. Chris Martine, a David Burpee Professor in Plant Genetics & Research Biology Department Chair at Bucknell University. Dr. Martine is a biodiversity scientist with a particular focus on plants, especially the ecology and evolution of plant reproduction. Much of his work has been in the plant family Solanaceae, including more than a decade looking into the unusual breeding systems of the genus Solanum in northern Australia through a combination of field studies and molecular phylogenetics.Dr. Martine shares what it's like to study the world of Biodiversity, how to get involved, what Bucknell has to offer and so much more. Please be sure to check out his incredible Youtube series "Plants Are Cool, Too"!Plants Are Cool Too: https://www.youtube.com/user/PlantsAreCoolToo Fololw on Twitter @MartineBotany
I'm not sure if you know this, but I think plants are pretty cool. My guest for today's episode, Dr. Chris Martine, thinks Plants Are Cool Too! Chris is a Professor of Plant Genetics and Research, Associate Department Chair of Biology, and Director of the Manning Herbarium at Bucknell University. He's also a science communicator, musician, past (and present?) actor, and the host and creator of the fantastic Plants Are Cool Too YouTube channel! Chris and I talked about his past and experience, the ins and outs of being faculty at different kinds of universities, research, education, mentoring, conservation, and so many other things! Chris is an empathetic and enthusiastic educator and his students are lucky to have him!Chris's Links:Bucknell Faculty ProfileTwitterYouTubeInstagram****************************************************I'm super excited to announce our partnership with Forest Proud! Forest Proud is a non-profit organization supporting forest-based climate solutions. Their mission is to build awareness and support for keeping forests as forests to fight climate change. Forest Proud believes:Forests provide powerful climate solutions.Forest management is how we deliver those solutions.Forest markets and products are how we sustain those solutions.I'm incredibly honored to get to work with them to highlight climate solutions coming out of the forest management and forestry industry! Head over to www.forestproud.com to learn more. If you want to snag some #ForestProud swag, use the promo code "planthropology" at checkout for 10% off for your order!#ForestProud Links:FacebookInstagramTwitterWebsiteAs always, thanks so much for listening! Subscribe, rate, and review Planthropology on your favorite podcast app. It really helps the show keep growing and reaching more people! Also, check out Planthropology on our website and various social media pages, all listed below. As an added bonus, if you review Planthropology on Apple Podcasts or Podchaser and send me a screenshot of it, I'll send you an awesome sticker pack!Listen in on Apple, Spotify, Stitcher, Castbox, or wherever else you like to get your podcasts.Website: www.planthropologypod.comPodchaser: www.podchaser.com/PlanthropologyFacebook: PlanthropologyFacebook group: Planthropology's Cool Plant PeopleInstagram: @PlanthropologyPodTwitter: @Planthropology_e-mail: Planthropologypod@gmail.com Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/planthropology)
Chris Martine, David Burpee Professor in Plant Genetics & Research, Biology Associate Department Chair, Bucknell University, host of Plants are Cool Too, on #Plantsgiving. We'll do our annual talk on the plants which contribute to your Thanksgiving meal, how an all plant meal wouldn't bee that bad…and how popular is Plantsgiving now. We'll ask how has this conversation spread, has social media changed botany, and if we were to rely less on meat, how will plants rise up as substitute (so to speak)? We'll talk about our footprint, our ‘plantprint' on the world…how plants impact us, what's coming up on
Three of our favorite segments from the week, in case you missed them. Marielle Anzelone and Chris Martine talk about the trees around us (First) | Assemblyman Ron Kim discusses what engaged AAPI voters this past election (starts around 22:22) | Playwright Anna Deavere Smith on her play, "Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992"(starts around 47:24) If you don't subscribe to the Brian Lehrer Show on iTunes, you can do that here.
Marielle Anzelone, botanist and founder of NYC Wildflower Week (.org), and Chris Martine, professor of Plant Genetics and Research at Bucknell University, YouTube host of "Plants are Cool Too!", and the author of Trees of New Jersey and the Mid-Atlantic States kick off a series of monthly conversations about the trees around us.Choose a tree and tweet a picture, using the hashtag #BLTrees! My tree is all ready for prime time! Pin oak (Quercus palustris), native to wet woods of NYC, here beautifying a corner of Brooklyn. So excited to launch the #BLtrees series 🌳🌳🌳 https://t.co/E8DJTqqL7V pic.twitter.com/TQFp1T54I1 — Marielle🌳Anzelone (@nycbotanist) November 10, 2021 @BrianLehrer Central Park just east of the parks recreation building and north of the 97th Street transverse. #bltrees pic.twitter.com/9AM9w1dCMk — Peter Lerangis (@PeterLerangis) November 10, 2021 I will always follow a @BrianLehrer assignment! Made easy as a lover of trees and especially this red maple in our backyard 🍁 #BLTrees pic.twitter.com/dqE9PTSbzY — Nicole Ruffo (@nruffo) November 10, 2021 #bltrees here's the tree I'll be following in Park Slope! @BrianLehrer pic.twitter.com/WMtMzqww8q — Leah Konen *Pre-Order THE PERFECT ESCAPE* (@LeahKonen) November 10, 2021 @BrianLehrer #BLtrees my faithful friend pic.twitter.com/IJOua2Z9vS — brenda arnowitz (@b_arnowitz) November 10, 2021 // #bltrees pic.twitter.com/mFia9Emx7K— ethan herschenfeld (@eherschenfeld) November 10, 2021 // ]]> I will follow the tree that convinced me 20+ years ago to raise my kids in this house in Staten Island #BLtrees pic.twitter.com/RPEtckYkGh — sara burke (@saraburke1) November 10, 2021 @BrianLehrer#BLtrees pic.twitter.com/UrWQmrYiHo — Josh Weinberger (@kitson) November 10, 2021
Chris Martine, David Burpee Professor in Plant Genetics & Research, Biology Associate Department Chair, Bucknell University, host of Plants are Cool Too, will be joined by Anais Barnes, Biology student, Bucknell University, on the latest search for rare plants locally, their work and research locally, the recognition recently in the Philadelphia Inquirer, #BlackBotanistsWeek 2021 (this week), and her words at the Botany 2021 Conference. Chris will also be joined by Tanisha M. Williams, PhD, Burpee Postdoctoral Fellow in Botany, Biology Department, Bucknell University, founder #BlackBotanistWeek, on her latest work, research, findings and studies. The world is another? degrees warmer since
Chris Martine, David Burpee Professor in Plant Genetics & Research, Biology Associate Department Chair, Bucknell University, host of Plants are Cool Too, will be joined by Anais Barnes, Biology student, Bucknell University, on the latest search for rare plants locally, their work and research locally, the recognition recently in the Philadelphia Inquirer, #BlackBotanistsWeek 2021 (this week), and her words at the Botany 2021 Conference. Chris will also be joined by Tanisha M. Williams, PhD, Burpee Postdoctoral Fellow in Botany, Biology Department, Bucknell University, founder #BlackBotanistWeek, on her latest work, research, findings and studies. The world is another? degrees warmer since we last spoke so we'll find out about more impacts locally and globally. As #BlackBotanistWeek we'll discuss her reflections on 2020 and ask if she has made the big time yet—being in a segment of Plants are Cool Too!.
Dr. Chris Martine, the star of ‘Plants are Cool Too,’ is back on Sunrise with his take on the Hasbro ‘Potato Head’ controversy. Turns out Mr. Potato Head has been both Mr. and Mrs. all along it was just kids jabbing on the parts that differentiated between papa potato and mama spud. Dr. Martine has brought us the ‘Plantsgiving’ conversation last November, and has helped discover new plants globally, and seemingly lost plants locally
Dr. Chris Martine, the star of ‘Plants are Cool Too,' is back on Sunrise with his take on the Hasbro ‘Potato Head' controversy. Turns out Mr. Potato Head has been both Mr. and Mrs. all along it was just kids jabbing on the parts that differentiated between papa potato and mama spud. Dr. Martine has brought us the ‘Plantsgiving' conversation last November, and has helped discover new plants globally, and seemingly lost plants locally
This week’s Taproot podcast episode is a conversation with Dr. Tanisha Williams A plant researcher, she was inspired this summer by the simultaneous rise of the pandemic and the civil uprising against police brutality to draw Black botanists together for a social media event called #BlackBotanistsWeek. Tanisha is an impressively accomplished early career researcher whose work has ranged from population genomics to the use of herbarium specimens to track climate induced changes in flowering phenology, all with a central thread of preserving plant diversity. She received her PhD from the University of Connecticut Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and now she is the David Burpee Postdoctoral Fellow in the Conservation, Genetics, and Ecology & Evolution of Plant Reproduction Group at Bucknell University. Currently, Tanisha works with Dr. Chris Martine on rare Pennsylvanian plant conservation, Australian Solanum taxonomy, and the way the Martu people of Australia interact with plants. Tanisha takes us on an inspiring journey through her research projects. She has persevered despite numerous setbacks, including those we are all familiar with like the pandemic, and those that are more specific to her experience, such as the dangers of spending time in nature while black and the lack of BIPOC representation in academia. Her social media campaign to provide black plant-lovers with a space to connect and share experiences quickly went viral when it first launched in July and has since expanded into a free virtual lecture series to highlight the work of black botanists. The series is called “Growing Black Roots: The Black Botanical Legacy,” and is hosted virtually by the Holden Arboretum every second Wednesday until September 2021. A transcript for this episode was generously provided by Jo Stormer http://bit.ly/TaprootS5E1_Transcript Tanisha’s website: https://naturesplasticity.weebly.com/research.html @t_marie_wms Tanisha’s Instagram and Twitter Beronda’s website and blog: http://www.berondamontgomery.com/reflect/my-black-botanical-legacy/ @BerondaM Beronda’s Twitter @ehaswell Elizabeth’s Twitter @baxtertwi Ivan’s Twitter @taprootpodcast Taproot Twitter Link to Holden Arboretum Black Botanists Lecture Series https://holdenarb.org/visit/events-lectures/scientist-lecture/ Join the Black Botanist’s Week community: #BlackBotanistsWeek https://blackbotanistsweek.weebly.com/ A story on Dr. Tiffany Knight’s work: https://source.wustl.edu/2013/02/walking-in-the-footsteps-of-19th-and-20thcentury-naturalists-scientists-find-battered-plantpollinator-network/ Burkle, L.A., Marlin, J.C. and T.M. Knight. 2013. Plant-Pollinator Interactions over 120 Years: Loss of Species, Co-Occurrence and Function. Science 339: 1611-1615.
Chris Martine, the star of ‘Plants are Cool Too' is back on Sunrise with some pandemic related #PlantsGiving campaign, encouraging everyone to raise awareness of the important role of plants on our Thanksgiving meal. Sounds frivolous, but we'll talk about the growing opportunities (pun intended) for plants in our lives and in our diets, the impact of climate change on our diets, the impact of colony collapse disorder on plants, and ‘the state of plants' in general.
Chris Martine, the star of ‘Plants are Cool Too’ is back on Sunrise with some pandemic related #PlantsGiving campaign, encouraging everyone to raise awareness of the important role of plants on our Thanksgiving meal. Sounds frivolous, but we’ll talk about the growing opportunities (pun intended) for plants in our lives and in our diets, the impact of climate change on our diets, the impact of colony collapse disorder on plants, and ‘the state of plants’ in general.
Chris Martine, the star of ‘Plants are Cool Too’ is back on Sunrise with some pandemic related #PlantsGiving campaign, encouraging everyone to raise awareness of the important role of plants on our Thanksgiving meal. Sounds frivolous, but we’ll talk about the growing opportunities (pun intended) for plants in our lives and in our diets, the impact of climate change on our diets, the impact of colony collapse disorder on plants, and ‘the state of plants’ in general.
Dr. Chris Martine, David Burpee Professor of Plant Genetics and Research at Bucknell University, discusses how he incorporates innovation into his career. From discovering and naming plants, to communicating about plants in creative ways, Martine finds ways to push the boundaries of what we know and how we think about plants. Bonus Content: Chris Martine’s Profile and Favorite Plant Profiles: Australian blood bone tomato and the Dungowan bush tomato Explore Chris’s Photo Profile Plants are Cool, too! youtube series Press Release about Chris’ work SHARE: Please tell us what you think. After you have listened to one (or several) episodes, we welcome your feedback.
The boys sat down with Chris Martine and drank some Don Julio 1942 tequila. They discussed Art and Contra studios and the House of Cryo, which Chris runs out of NYC. Josh Heinel sat in on the conversation with us and the loft was full of people for this pre thanksgiving party episode.
Today we are joined by someone who is as passionate about doing science as he is with sharing his experiences with the world. Dr. Chris Martine is a true botany nut and his lab has been focusing on understanding the evolution of a group of Australian Solanaceae related to eggplants. We learn how pollinators have played a significant role in the evolution of a peculiar mating system and how that has led to a unique radiation in the genus Solanum. We also explore some of the reasons behind why we think science communication is so important as well as the many ways in which it can be effective and successful. Join us for a wonderful discussion rooted in a mutual love for botany. This episode was produced in part by Carly, Stephen, Botanical Tours, Moonwort Studios, Lisa, Liba, Lucas, Mohsin Kazmi Takes Pictures, doeg, Daniel, Clifton, Stephanie, Rachelle, Benjamin, Eli, Rachael, Anthony, Plant By Design, Philip, Brent, Ron, Tim, Homestead Brooklyn, Brodie, Kevin, Sophia, Brian, Mark, Rens, Bendix, Irene, Holly, Mountain Misery Farms, Caitlin, Manuel, Jennifer, Sara, and Margie.
In this episode we talk about why Millennials are so turned down these days & not big on the party scene. In Adulting 101 we have an interview with Chris Martine the founder of Drinklynk, an app that connects you with the right venues for a perfect night out. For #tbt we are talking New Edition and the fantastic #BET miniseries. Dive in !