Podcasts about Missouri Botanical Garden

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Best podcasts about Missouri Botanical Garden

Latest podcast episodes about Missouri Botanical Garden

Total Information AM
Local groups are tracking a summertime pest – the mosquito – and you can help

Total Information AM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2025 3:07


Debbie Monterrey talks with Jean Ponzi, Missouri Botanical Garden about how local groups are tracking mosquitos and how everyone can help.

Science Friday
Identifying New Plants, And The Scientific Secrets Of Superfoods

Science Friday

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 29:59


What does it take to create and maintain one of the largest repositories of botanical information in the world? For starters, it can mean helicopter-ing into remote nooks of the Amazon, hiking through rough terrain, looking for strange fruits and flowers, and climbing trees to pluck specimens from the branches. Then there's all the science required to identify, classify, and codify those species. Botanists Lúcia Lohmann and Charlotte Taylor join Host Flora Lichtman to discuss their work discovering new plant species and maintaining the storied Missouri Botanical Garden.And, what does it mean to be a superfood? What is the science of micronutrient-dense foods like millet, which get less hype than foods like açaí, goji berries, and quinoa? Flora talks with biological engineer Kiruba Krishnaswamy, who puts food under a microscope—literally—and studies the nutrients that help make our bodies function, in hopes of harnessing them to fight hunger worldwide.Guests: Dr. Lúcia Lohmann, professor at Washington University in St. Louis, and president and director of the Missouri Botanical GardenDr. Charlotte Taylor, botanist and senior curator at the Missouri Botanical Garden Dr. Kiruba Krishnaswamy, assistant professor in the Colleges of Engineering and Agriculture at the University of MissouriTranscript will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.

St. Louis on the Air
Home Gardening 101: Experts share tips for St. Louis growers

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 32:07


From tools and materials to varieties of edible and decorative plants, this home gardening conversation offers growers tips for making the most of their yards – and porches and window sills – this spring planting season. Daria McKelvey, home gardening information and outreach supervisor at Missouri Botanical Garden; and Megan Moncure, engagement director for Seed St. Louis, join the show to share advice and respond to listener calls.

The STL Bucket List Show
Spring Bucket List: 25 Things to Do in St. Louis

The STL Bucket List Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 13:48


On this episode of the STL Bucket List Show, host Luke Farrell goes through his top 25 things to add to your Spring Bucket List. With great weather on the horizon, this is the perfect short listen to get fun ideas on what to do in St. Louis this Spring. 1. See the Cherry Blossoms at the Missouri Botanical GardenSpring transforms the Japanese Garden at the Missouri Botanical Garden into a stunning display of cherry blossoms. Wander through peaceful walkways, enjoy the serene koi ponds, and take in the breathtaking colors. Learn more.2. Visit the St. Louis Zoo and See the Spring Baby AnimalsSpring is baby season at the St. Louis Zoo! Spot adorable newborns like lion cubs, penguin chicks, and giraffe calves while enjoying the mild weather. Plus, admission is free! Plan your visit.3. Ride the St. Louis Wheel at Union StationGet a bird's-eye view of downtown St. Louis from this 200-foot-high Ferris wheel. Go at sunset for an unforgettable skyline experience. Book tickets.4. Enjoy Patio Season at 4 Hands Brewing CompanySoak up the sun with a cold City Wide or seasonal brew at 4 Hands Brewing Company's patio. A perfect spot for happy hour or a weekend hangout. Check out their beer list.5. Hike at Castlewood State ParkTake in stunning river views and lush greenery while hiking the scenic trails at Castlewood. It's a local favorite for both hikers and mountain bikers. Explore more.Listen to the episode to hear the full list or visit our website!Support the show

The Future. Built Smarter.
ENR Best Project elevates Garden's visitor experience

The Future. Built Smarter.

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 22:20


This episode examines the Missouri Botanical Garden's new Jack C. Taylor Visitor Center in St. Louis, winner of ENR's National 2024 Best of the Best Project Award in the cultural category. The LEED Gold project houses an event center, gift shop, meeting spaces, restaurant, and auditorium, and included the renovation of the historic Linnean House, the oldest continuously operated public greenhouse west of the Mississippi. Insight into the project is provided by guests Zach Carter of IMEG and Deniz Piskin, Vice President for Facilities and Construction at the Missouri Botanical Garden.  The decision to build the new center was largely driven by continual growth in the number of annual visitors; last year 1.3 million people visited the Garden, far more than the previous center could have comfortably accommodated. “The way the original visitor center was constructed, there were a lot of little bottlenecks in getting visitors through the center and into the garden,” Deniz says. The overall visitor experience was the other focus of the project. In addition to the vastly improved entrance and its accessibility, upon entering the new center, visitors are immersed in natural light as they view the exterior gardens through the facility's south wall of windows. An architectural lantern, or skylight, in the lobby includes a custom-designed scrim perforated in a pattern inspired by tree canopies. These and many other biophilic elements bring the outdoors in. “Everywhere you look, there's something related to nature,” says Deniz. Hidden from sight are the mechanical, electrical, plumbing, fire protection, and technology systems designed by IMEG. Key features include a 50,000-gallon rainwater collection cistern to provide water for the plants in the greenhouse (botanical garden staff consider rain “liquid gold”); displacement ventilation/natural stratification in the 50-foot tall lobby to improve occupant comfort; rooftop solar arrays; and a generator devoted to providing backup power to maintain the appropriate climate for the greenhouse, which features a variety of plants from the Mediterranean. Collaboration among all stakeholders was integral to the design-assist project, which was completed in multiple phases and included the construction of a temporary visitor center to keep the Garden open to visitors throughout construction. Deniz advises other organizations contemplating such a milestone project to “start with a clear understanding of what your goals and objectives are and check back throughout the design process to ensure you are not deviating from your goals. That's what this team did. We always kept in mind our visitors, always kept in mind the visitor experience.” See photos of the Missouri Botanical Garden's Jack C. Taylor Visitor Center and read the IMEG project case study. For further information and photographs, read this feature published by Metropolis.

Faith For Work
Winning with Faith - Adrian Bracy

Faith For Work

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2025 40:48


Whether you're in the boardroom or in the field, this episode delivers game-changing wisdom that will inspire you to play the long game and win with God.In this episode, we visit with Adrian Bracy, Executive Director for The Steward Trust. Adrian is a trailblazer who spent 18 remarkable years in the C-Suite of the NFL, breaking barriers and redefining leadership. She shares her journey of navigating the fast-paced, male-dominated world of professional football, revealing the strategies that helped her pivot with purpose, and lead with vision and passion.  Through candid stories, she opens up about overcoming biases, managing conflict, and cultivating resilience, highlighting how prayer and self-awareness became her signature moves—both in her career and personal life. Her insights transcend the gridiron, offering universal lessons on leadership, strategy, and success. Adrian E. Bracy, MBA, CPA Adrian is an author, business and executive leadership coach, and motivational speaker. Currently she is the Executive Director for The Steward Trust aka The Steward Family Office. She is also the retired Chief Executive Officer of YWCA Metro St. Louis where she served for nearly 12 years.  After spending 18 years in senior financial management with the National Football League (The Miami Dolphins, St. Louis Rams, and most recently CFO for the Arizona Cardinals), Bracy transitioned to the non-profit sector to follow her passion—that is, “to inspire and make a difference in the lives of women and girls.” Bracy has received numerous awards throughout her career including Black Enterprise 50 Most Powerful Blacks in Sports; Black Enterprise 50 Most Powerful Women in Business; St. Louis Business Journal's Most Influential Businesswomen, St. Louis American Nonprofit Executive of the Year award. Bracy graduated from Morgan State University in Baltimore with a degree in accounting and Nova Southeastern University with a master's in business administration. Bracy is a certified John Maxwell Coach, Trainer and Speaker. She sits on the boards of The Missouri Botanical Gardens, Sub-District and The St. Louis Sports Commission. Adrian is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated and The Links, Incorporated.  She is a lifetime member of the National Association of Black Accountants and the National Black MBA Association. She's the author of Halftime: Learn to Pivot as a Leader and Identify Your Next Step. Bracy and her husband Vernon have one son, Donovan and daughter-in-law, Royalle. They are members of Shalom Church (City of Peace) in Florissant, MO.Support the showTransforming the workplace one Bible study at a time - DONATE today! CONNECT WITH US:B-B-T.org | News | LinkedIn | Instagram Biblical Business Training (“BBT”) equips busy, working people to grow in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ and empowers them in small-group Bible study settings to apply Biblical principles to their every day lives - especially in the workplace. BBT is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization which exists to help people develop their Christian “Faith for Work – Leadership for Life!”

St. Louis on the Air
How to harvest invasive plants in helpful — and delicious — ways

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 24:37


Weeding out invasive species can feel like a never ending chore because of the rapid growth and spread rate. Missouri Botanical Garden associate scientist Wendy Applequist encourages traditional uses of these plants to help the ecosystem — and ourselves.

Did That Really Happen?

This week we travel back to dinosaur times with 65! Join us as we learn about all kinds of prehistoric weirdness, including pack-hunting dinosaurs, Spanish moss, swamp creatures, the big asteroid, and more! Sources: Emily Osterloff, "How an Asteroid Ended the Age of the Dinosaurs," Natural History Museum, available at https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/how-an-asteroid-caused-extinction-of-dinosaurs.html#:~:text=The%20impact%20site%2C%20known%20as,largest%20crater%20on%20the%20planet. Eric Hand, "Updated: Drilling of Dinosaur-killing Impact Crater Explains Buried Circular Hills," Science, available at https://www.science.org/content/article/updated-drilling-dinosaur-killing-impact-crater-explains-buried-circular-hills Image of continents 65 million years ago, available at https://www.sciencephoto.com/media/1044470/view/continents-65-million-years-ago-illustration Tyrannosauroid Fossil Localities Map, available at https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tyrannosauroid_fossil_localities_map.png Natalie Johnson, "Jurassic Park Got It Wrong: UWO Research Indicates Raptors Don't Hunt in Packs," UWO Today, available at https://www.uwosh.edu/today/84696/jurassic-park-got-it-wrong-uwo-research-indicates-raptors-dont-hunt-in-packs/ Cameron Duke, "Tyrannosaurs May Have Hunted Together in Packs Like Wolves," New Scientist, available at https://www.newscientist.com/article/2275060-tyrannosaurs-may-have-hunted-together-in-packs-like-wolves/ Sean Mowbray, "Do We Know if Dinosaurs Were Smart Enough to Hunt in Packs?" Discover Magazine, available at https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/do-we-know-if-dinosaurs-were-smart-enough-to-hunt-in-packs Daniel Strain, "Paleontologists discover Colorado 'swamp dweller' that lived alongside dinosaurs," https://www.colorado.edu/today/2024/10/23/paleontologists-discover-colorado-swamp-dweller-lived-alongside-dinosaurs https://www.discoverwildlife.com/animal-facts/heleocola-piceanus-colorado Stephen Greb, William A DiMichele, Robert Gastaldo, Cortland Eble, and Scott Wing, "Prehistoric Wetland," Elsevier (2022) https://web.colby.edu/ragastal/files/2022/08/2022_GrebEtAl_PrehistoricWetlands.pdf  Life on Our Planet, "In the Shadow of Giants" Netflix.  Missouri Botanical Garden, https://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?kempercode=f427  "10 Fascinating Facts About Spanish Moss," Mental Floss (2023), https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/67807/10-things-you-should-know-about-spanish-moss  Chelsea Harvey, "The World's Oldest Moss Outlived the Dinosaurs, but It May Not Survive Climate Change," Scientific American (August 10, 2023). https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-worlds-oldest-moss-outlived-the-dinosaurs-but-it-may-not-survive-climate-change/  https://www.edenproject.com/learn/eden-at-home/a-guide-to-prehistoric-plants Josef Pšenička and Stanislav Opluštil, "The epiphytic plants in the fossil record and its example from in situ tuff from Pennylvanian of Radnice Basin (Czech Republic)," Bulletin of Geosciences 88, no.2 (2013): 401-16. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/241660344_The_epiphytic_plants_in_the_fossil_record_and_its_example_from_in_situ_tuff_from_Pennsylvanian_of_Radnice_Basin_Czech_Republic  Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/65  Christy Lemire, "65" https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/65-movie-review-2023  Late Night with Seth Meyers https://youtu.be/tJfmy48AplM?si=kts3zwrzZJBalQji 

Total Information AM
Missouri Botanical Garden gets National Park grant to share Henry Shaw's slave ownership history

Total Information AM

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 6:08


MOBOT's Michelle Martin Bonner, the Director of Diversity, Inclusion and Belonging, admits to Megan Lynch that she was unaware of Henry Shaw's history of owning slaves until she started at the Garden. 'It wasn't something that was openly discussed,' says Bonner, 'I had to learn about it.'

St. Louis on the Air
MoBot scientist is the world's top female botanist naming plants today

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2025 29:41


On this encore episode, Missouri Botanical Garden scientist, Charlotte Taylor, names 500 new species of plants. That makes her the most prolific living female botanist — an accomplishment only revealed last year by researchers from Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the University of Cambridge. The researchers found Taylor is the third most prolific female botanist in the field — ever. Taylor discusses her contributions to the field of botany and takes us inside the world of a world-class taxonomist.

In Defense of Plants Podcast
Ep. 506 - The Digital Future of Herbaria

In Defense of Plants Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2024


The herbarium world is a fascinating one. These botanical repositories are goldmines of data and help us understand the present by looking at the past. But what kind of future questions can herbaria help solve? Experts say the opportunities are endless, but we will need new technologies to take full advantage. Join me and Curator and Director of the Herbarium at Missouri Botanical Garden, Dr. Jordan Teisher, as we look at how new technologies are helping scientists look at herbarium collections in entirely new ways! This episode was produced in part by Linda, Alana, Sigma, Max, Richard, Maia, Rens, David, Robert, Thomas, Valerie, Joan, Mohsin Kazmi Photography, Cathy, Simon, Nick, Paul, Charis, EJ, Laura, Sung, NOK, Stephen, Heidi, Kristin, Luke, Sea, Shannon, Thomas, Will, Jamie, Waverly, Brent, Tanner, Rick, Kazys, Dorothy, Katherine, Emily, Theo, Nichole, Paul, Karen, Randi, Caelan, Tom, Don, Susan, Corbin, Keena, Robin, Peter, Whitney, Kenned, Margaret, Daniel, Karen, David, Earl, Jocelyn, Gary, Krysta, Elizabeth, Southern California Carnivorous Plant Enthusiasts, Pattypollinators, Peter, Judson, Ella, Alex, Dan, Pamela, Peter, Andrea, Nathan, Karyn, Michelle, Jillian, Chellie, Linda, Laura, Miz Holly, Christie, Carlos, Paleo Fern, Levi, Sylvia, Lanny, Ben, Lily, Craig, Sarah, Lor, Monika, Brandon, Jeremy, Suzanne, Kristina, Christine, Silas, Michael, Aristia, Felicidad, Lauren, Danielle, Allie, Jeffrey, Amanda, Tommy, Marcel, C Leigh, Karma, Shelby, Christopher, Alvin, Arek, Chellie, Dani, Paul, Dani, Tara, Elly, Colleen, Natalie, Nathan, Ario, Laura, Cari, Margaret, Mary, Connor, Nathan, Jan, Jerome, Brian, Azomonas, Ellie, University Greens, Joseph, Melody, Patricia, Matthew, Garrett, John, Ashley, Cathrine, Melvin, OrangeJulian, Porter, Jules, Griff, Joan, Megan, Marabeth, Les, Ali, Southside Plants, Keiko, Robert, Bryce, Wilma, Amanda, Helen, Mikey, Michelle, German, Joerg, Cathy, Tate, Steve, Kae, Carole, Mr. Keith Santner, Lynn, Aaron, Sara, Kenned, Brett, Jocelyn, Ethan, Sheryl, Runaway Goldfish, Ryan, Chris, Alana, Rachel, Joanna, Lori, Paul, Griff, Matthew, Bobby, Vaibhav, Steven, Joseph, Brandon, Liam, Hall, Jared, Brandon, Christina, Carly, Kazys, Stephen, Katherine, Manny, doeg, Daniel, Tim, Philip, Tim, Lisa, Brodie, Bendix, Irene, holly, Sara, and Margie.

Moms of the Lou
Episode #14: A Holly Jolly STL Holiday with Diana Waldman

Moms of the Lou

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 21:30


Rebekah Coste is back to host the Moms of the Lou podcast! In this episode, Rebekah welcomes Diana Waldman, a St. Louis native and mother of three, to discuss the holiday season. Diana shares her love for the holidays, highlighting traditions like attending the Nutcracker and making cinnamon cookies. They discuss various holiday activities in St. Louis, including Zoo Lights, Winter Wonderland, and the Missouri Botanical Garden's Glow. Diana emphasizes the importance of having mom friends and balancing holiday activities with rest of family life. Check out St. Louis Mom's Holiday Guide and don't forget to check out St. Louis Mom's annual Donuts with Santa event!A native St. Louisan, Diana lives in Clayton with her husband, young son, two daughters, and two dogs. She has her Bachelor's degree in Anthropology, which she uses as an excuse to be nosy regarding other people's lives. She left a career in legal marketing to work part-time from home and focus on her babies (furry and otherwise). Her current parenting mantras are: “I can do it all, just not all at once,” and “It will probably be fine?” Diana gets her kicks by going for long runs, reading a mix of high-brow and low-brow literature, and seeking out activities her whole family (including the puppies!) can enjoy around town.We hope you enjoyed this podcast episode! To learn more about Moms of the Lou you can go to stlouismom.com or follow us on Instagram and Facebook. You can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcast and Spotify. And don't forget to rate and review so more people can tune in! This episode was produced by the St. Louis Mom. It was recorded and edited by Half Coast Studios in St. Louis, Missouri. Music composed by Trina Harger.

St. Louis on the Air
Missouri Botanical Garden's first woman president, Lúcia Lohmann, brings focus on climate change

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2024 12:54


Lúcia Lohmann will become Missouri Botanical Garden's first woman president. The internationally recognized botanist highlights climate change and biodiversity as the greatest challenges of our time. She shares how we can battle them while keeping Missouri Botanical Garden as a world-class institution in botany.

The Gateway
Monday, November 11 - The first woman president at MOBOT

The Gateway

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2024 12:18


The Missouri Botanical Garden will have its first woman president next year. Kate Grumke sat down with Dr. Lucia Lohmann to learn why she wanted to come back to the Garden and to St. Louis.

Garden Hotline
(Hour 2) Fall Events and Gardening Q&A with Shaw Nature Reserve

Garden Hotline

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2024 36:17


Scott Jagow and Erin Goss from Shaw Nature Reserve share details on upcoming fall events, including the importance of a sincere pumpkin patch and Halloween-themed activities at the reserve. The episode also addresses listener gardening questions: Sally seeks advice on a dying oak tree with mushrooms, and Erin suggests consulting the Missouri Botanical Garden and the University of Missouri Extension. Jan asks about controlling creeping charlie, and Erin recommends manual removal or a broadleaf herbicide

Total Information AM
'Citizen Scientists' wanted for insect study in St Louis

Total Information AM

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 9:28


Victoria Brown-Kennerly- Webster University associate professor, an ant expert; Missouri Botanical Garden entomologist Tad Yankoski;  AND  ethnobotanist Allison Joyce  from the Garden's  EarthWays Center join Debbie and Tom to discuss a national study of the DNA of Ants.  More information at BioDiversitySTL

Garden Hotline
Hour 1 - Exploring Native Plants and Garden Design with Erin Goss

Garden Hotline

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2024 36:47


Join us on the Garden Hotline as we delve into the world of native plants and garden design with special guest Erin Goss. As the coordinator for the Native Plant Initiative at Shaw Nature Reserve, Erin shares her journey from working with books to becoming a passionate advocate for native horticulture. Learn about the importance of native plants, the beauty of the Shaw Nature Reserve, and practical gardening tips for St. Louis residents. Plus, we answer listener questions on lawn care, managing wildlife in gardens, and more.

Garden Hotline
Hour 2 - Exploring Native Plants and Garden Design with Erin Goss

Garden Hotline

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2024 37:08


Join us on the Garden Hotline as we delve into the world of native plants and garden design with special guest Erin Goss. As the coordinator for the Native Plant Initiative at Shaw Nature Reserve, Erin shares her journey from working with books to becoming a passionate advocate for native horticulture. Learn about the importance of native plants, the beauty of the Shaw Nature Reserve, and practical gardening tips for St. Louis residents. Plus, we answer listener questions on lawn care, managing wildlife in gardens, and more.

Cultivating Place
Back to school (with plants) - Sean Doherty, VP of Education, Missouri Botanical Garden

Cultivating Place

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 59:22


It's back to school time – you can tell by the ads on television and radio (yes, I was watching the Olympics!) and by the displays at the stores with notebooks, pencils, backpacks, and lunch boxes being on prominent display. As you and I know, one of the best classrooms available to us all is the outdoors – from the wildlands of fields, woods, and waysides around us to more formal state and national parks and monuments, our own gardens, and very specifically, our many public gardens. Being outdoors is a great classroom, and plants are among our best teachers. Joining me this week to explore all of this and more is Sean Doherty, a gardener, a plant lover, a 25-year-career public educator: in the classroom, as a principal, and for six years as a St. Louis School's district superintendent. Sean is now the Vice President of Education at the Missouri Botanical Garden in downtown St. Louis. From school groups to mindfulness walks, botanical art, and identification classes to therapeutic horticulture, from seed banking to historic herbarium collections, this botanic garden in St. Louis continues to expand how they and we think about the phenomenal educational capacity and imperative of plants and their conservation. Join us! Cultivating Place now has a donate button! Thank you so much for listening over the years, and we hope you'll support Cultivating Place. We can't thank you enough for making it possible for this young program to grow even more of these types of conversations. The show is available as a podcast on SoundCloud, iTunes, and Google Podcast. To read more and for many more photos, please visit www.cultivatingplace.com.

The Show on KMOX
Hour 3 - Headlines

The Show on KMOX

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 34:29


The final hour starts with headlines including a teen charged with DWI in fatal crash gets 4 months and a Missouri man set to be executed.  Amy wants the Stanley Cup back in Canada. The Corpse Flower at Missouri Botanical Garden has bloomed. Finally, which of the 4 professional mascots in Missouri do you think has a gambling problem?

St. Louis on the Air
Corn and its indigenous roots take center stage in new MoBot exhibit

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 20:27


No matter how you prefer to enjoy it – popped, grilled, or in tortilla form – corn is beloved by cultures across the globe. The Missouri Botanical Gardens is putting a spotlight on the humble crop in a new exhibition, "Kernels of Culture: Maize Around the World," showcasing just how versatile corn is.

The Nerdball Podcast
Caroline Hannah | 222

The Nerdball Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 56:20


Caroline and Lorenzo nerdout about 1812 reenactments, fife, jam band, Fort Meigs and then they get into first siege, Francis Scott Key meme, too serious, rip off, Missouri Botanical Gardens, inside job, succulents, Toledo Botanical Garden, Lord of the Rings, Amys, master plan leadership changing yards, and so much more!

St. Louis on the Air
MoBot scientist is the world's top female botanist naming plants today

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2024 29:42


Missouri Botanical Garden scientist Charlotte Taylor has named 500 new species of plants. That makes her the most prolific living female botanist — an accomplishment only revealed last year by researchers from Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the University of Cambridge. The researchers found Taylor is the third most prolific female botanist in the field — ever. Taylor discusses her contributions to the field of botany and takes us inside the world of a world-class taxonomist.

MichMash
Kyra Krakos

MichMash

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2024 31:52


Kyra Krakos and I talk about collaborating and brainstorming with the science professionals of St. Louis, urban orchards and pollination success, the Missouri Botanical Garden, having thousands of hours of bee footage, America's obsession with manicured lawns, being haunted by the ghost of Darwin, "be a good mammal", and so much more!   LINKEDIN MOBOTExhibit This Earthen Door   MichMash is an open platform for our guests to be heard. The views expressed by our guests are not necessarily the views of MichMash, 100th Monkey, or Mich Hancock.

Total Information AM
Local botanist is the most prolific female taxonomist alive

Total Information AM

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 7:10


Charlotte Taylor, Missouri Botanical Garden taxonomist, joins Debbie Monterrey to discuss how she became the most prolific female taxonomist alive, and gives a tour of the herbarium, the largest in North America.

Big Seance Podcast
244 - Mourning Society of St. Louis - Big Seance

Big Seance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 67:15


  The Mourning Society of St Louis is a civilian reenacting group with an interest in mourning, death culture, Spiritualism, and the funeral customs of the mid-nineteenth century through the early twentieth century. This incredibly unique group, co-founded by Edna Dieterle and Katherine Kozemczak in 2005, plans educational events such as historically accurate funerals and wakes, and is the first of its kind. Join the conversation with Patrick, Edna, Katherine, and Sherri Morrow, a member since 2015. How do they build the atmosphere and set the scene? What can modern society learn from Victorian mourning customs? How does playing a character in mourning affect these ladies in their daily lives? Pour some tea, cover your mirror with a black drape, and hear about the inspiration, the research, and the planning behind events that even includes a live seance play based on documented moments in history! Visit BigSeance.com/244 for more info. Other Listening Options Direct Download Link   In this episode: Intro :00 The Mourning Society of St Louis is a civilian reenacting group with an interest in mourning, death culture, spiritualism and the funeral customs of the mid-nineteenth century through the early twentieth century. Their main focus is public educational events. The Mourning Society has participated in events with our partners at the beautiful and historic Bellefontaine Cemetery, the Campbell House Museum, the St Louis Public Library, Jefferson Barracks Historic Site, Missouri History Museum, the General Daniel Bissell House, the Field House Museum, Lafayette Park Conservancy, and the Stephen and Peter Sachs Museum at the Missouri Botanical Garden. :52 Guests for this episode are Edna Dieterle and Katherine Kozemczak, who co-founded the Mourning Society of St. Louis in 2005, along with Sherri Morrow, who joined the group in 2015. 4:15 Katherine tells the story of how the Mourning Society came about. Her and Edna were already volunteers on the board for a historic mansion in St. Louis. But the main inspiration started with Edna's trip to a home Mississippi. 4:55 Katherine and Edna's growing collection of artifacts and accoutrement, including coffins! 6:03 In 2015 their educational mourning events expanded to include funerals at the beautiful and historic Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis, and wakes at the the Campbell House Museum. 7:18 A truly unique group, and probably the first of its kind! 9:01 More on the Victorian funeral events at Bellefontaine Cemetery, including a service in the chapel, and educating participants on the cholera epidemic in 1865. 10:00 A striking and moving sight that includes an undertaker with a historic and period hearse. 12:21 The research and education that goes into the planning of events. 13:50 Sherri on why she joined the Mourning Society. “These are my people.” 14:47 Finding (or sewing) Victorian clothing! 15:23 Carpe Diem. Facing mortality and how playing the role of “mourner” affects these reenactors in their daily modern lives? 18:22 When people just don't appreciate or understand it. 23:48 Tear Catchers and Wearing Black. Misconceptions about Victorian mourning customs. 27:14 “A lot of times, women did not attend the funerals at all, because men were like, ‘They can't control their emotions and they're going to cry in front of everybody.'” — Katherine 32:03 Black drapery, superstitions around mirrors, and marking the house to know a death has occurred. 34:03 The custom of placing coins over the eyes of the deceased. 37:09 Events at the Campbell House and the Magic Chef Mansion, including a wake, mourning customs, medical aspects of Victorian mourning (including live leeches!), and post mortem photography. 38:22 The Spiritualism event at the General Daniel Bissell House, which includes spirit communication devices, and a seance play which incorporates documented accounts of seances from the period! 40:03 Volunteering or joining the group. “It's just like a bad dance, you know? Too many ladies and not enough gentleman. We never have enough people to carry the coffin.” — Katherine 44:09 Drawing people in, sneaking in education, and making it fun. 47:45 Building the atmosphere and setting the scene. “We try to leave people with an impression of what it was really like and not like a romanticized idea of what it was like. We definitely had people cry on some of the tours before, because I think they go in thinking it's going to be spooky, and sometimes it's incredibly sad.” — Katherine 48:28 “We were all like, 'Whoa. We're doing something here.'” — Katherine 50:03 Connecting emotionally with things from the past. “I think there's a tendency to disconnect from things that haven't happened in living memory.” — Katherine 51:03 Children died all the time, but it doesn't mean they weren't just as devastated by the loss as we would be today. 54:35 Patrick imagines who his Mourning Society character would be and how he would dress. 56:03 “I started doing this because I was very passionate about history, and I love finding out things that I didn't know before. And this definitely gives you a chance, when you do the research, to just plunge into it.” — Sherri 58:31 When it's time to take off the veils, pull your iPhones out and have fun! 59:14 “Who are we going to bury?” — Edna 59:55 Expanding to other time periods and movements, like women's suffrage. 1:00:37 The Mourning Society of St. Lous is approaching their 20 year anniversary! 1:02:43 Outro 1:03:57 A special THANK YOU to Patreon supporters at the Super Paranerd and Parlor Guest level! 1:05:15   Looking for more Mourning Society? MourningSociety.com Facebook: @MourningSociety Instagram: @MourningSocietyStL Beyond the Grave: St. Louis Mourning Society keeps funeral traditions alive (West News Magazine) St. Louisans Are Undertaking A Reenactment Of Robert Campbell's Wake 140 Years After His Death (NPR) The St. Louis Mourning Society teaches visitors about 19th century funeral and mourning customs. (PBS) Patrick has two photo albums (Album 1 & Album 2) from visits to Bellefontaine Cemetery (Flickr)     The Big Seance Podcast can be found right here, on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Pandora, Spotify, TuneIn Radio, Amazon Music, Audible, iHeart Radio, and YouTube. Please subscribe and share with a fellow paranerd! Do you have any comments or feedback? Please contact me at Patrick@BigSeance.com. Consider recording your voice feedback directly from your device on my SpeakPipe page! You can also call the show and leave feedback at (775) 583-5563 (or 7755-TELL-ME). I would love to include your voice feedback in a future show. The candles are already lit, so come on in and join the seance!    

Master Minds
Episode #26: The Evolution of Lizards with Prof. Jonathan Losos, PhD

Master Minds

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2024 47:58


Today we're talking to Prof. Jonathan Losos, William H. Danforth Distinguished Professor of Biology here at Washington University. Professor Losos is an internationally renowned scholar in the field of evolutionary biology. He also serves as the Director of the Living Earth Collaborative, an academic partnership between WashU, the Missouri Botanical Garden, and the St. Louis Zoo to advance the study of biodiversity. His field work has taken him to various islands in the Caribbean and Central America. Currently, his lab at WashU studies the behavioral and evolutionary ecology of lizards, and how wild species adapt to changing urban environments. Their main focus is the Caribbean Anolis lizard, and the behavioral, ecological, functional morphological, and phylogenetic data to study their adaptive radiation.

Nature Revisited
Revisit: James Faupel - The Urban Prairie

Nature Revisited

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2024 30:39


James Faupel specializes in Restoration Ecology at the Litzinger Road Ecology Center (LREC), a division of the Missouri Botanical Gardens in St Louis, MO. With a background in horticulture and arboriculture, James is part of a growing movement championing the ecological benefits of cultivating native plant species. In this episode, James discusses the alarming loss of natural prairie from the American Midwest, its vital role in the preservation of wildlife and plant species, and how 'Urban Prairies' can help raise awareness and appreciation for prairies, and the crucial mission to save and restore them. [Originally published June 28, 2022. Ep 72] James' article A Prairie Resurgence?: https://mbgecologicalrestoration.wordpress.com/2021/08/12/a-prairie-resurgence/ LREC website: https://litzsinger.org/

St. Louis on the Air
The Endangered Species Act is 50. Here's how MoBot is helping plants survive

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2024 21:39


50 years after the Endangered Species Act was passed, the Missouri Botanical Garden continues their plant conservation efforts within the garden grounds and in the wild. Matthew Albrecht, director of Missouri Botanical Garden's Center for Conservation and Sustainable Development, and Becky Sucher, senior manager of the garden's Living Collections share the successes in plant conservation and how the noticeably changing weather patterns affects their work at the garden and in the field.

St. Louis on the Air
Fear over brown recluse spiders is overblown and unnecessary. Here's why

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2023 21:26


Brown recluse spiders are infamous for their necrotic venom. But how dangerous are they, really? Missouri Botanical Garden senior entomologist Tad Yankoski says the arachnids get an unnecessarily bad wrap. He shares why you should stop worrying about brown recluses and learn to appreciate the spider.

The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens
Fossil Free Food Systems: Jason Bradford, Andrew Millison, Vandana Shiva, Daniel Zetah | Reality Roundtable #06

The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2023 91:18 Very Popular


Show Summary:    On this Reality Roundtable, Nate is joined by small-scale farmer Jason Bradford, permaculturist and documentarian Andrew Millison, regenerative agriculture activist Vandana Shiva, and regenerative farmer and educator Daniel Zetah to discuss the feasibility of a food system fully or mostly independent of fossil fuel inputs. While a non-industrialized agriculture system is certainly possible (it was the norm for the majority of human history), what that will look like and how we even begin such a transition is daunting with a population of 8 billion humans to feed. How do we teach people the skills they'll need as fossil inputs become less affordable, reliable, and accessible? Can we create a cultural shift towards a slower lifestyle that is more connected to the land which provides us food? What do the people of a society look like where we are once again centered around agriculture and in tune with the flows of nature? How would our relationship with jobs and the land have to change?   About Jason Bradford:   Jason Bradford has been affiliated with Post Carbon Institute since 2004, first as a Fellow and then as Board President. He worked for the Center for Conservation and Sustainable Development at the Missouri Botanical Garden, was a Visiting Scholar at U.C. Davis, and during that period co-founded the Andes Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research Group (ABERG). He decided to shift from academia to learn more about and practice sustainable agriculture, and in the process, completed six months of training with Ecology Action (aka GrowBiointensive) in Willits, California, and then founded Brookside School Farm.   About Andrew Millison:   Andrew Millison is an innovative educator, storyteller and designer. He founded the Permaculture Design education program at Oregon State University (OSU) in 2009. At OSU Andrew serves as an Education Director and Senior Instructor who offers over 25 years of experience, and a playful approach to regenerative design. Andrew is also a documentary videographer who travels the world documenting epic permaculture projects in places such as India, Egypt, Mexico, Cuba, and throughout the US. You can view his videos and series on his YouTube channel. About Vandana Shiva   Vandana Shiva is a well known activist, author of many books, and is a global champion on regenerative local agriculture, biodiversity and nutritious food. She has a PhD in physics and 40 years ago founded the Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology, an independent research institute that works on the most significant ecological problems of our times.  About Daniel Zetah:   Daniel grew up on a farm in Minnesota where he learned to fix all manner of things driven from an insatiable curiosity about how things worked. He studied economics and business at university. After waking to our planetary predicament, he became a full time environmental activist, then moved to an off grid community in the mountains where he studied permaculture and built straw bale houses. He moved back to America to help steer culture in a more sane direction. He and his wife Stephanie moved back to the family farm in Minnesota where they are growing 80% of their calories, rebuilding the local ecology, and educating and empowering people to wrest back control of their sovereignty as human beings.    For Show Notes and More visit: https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/episode/rr06-bradford-millison-shiva-zetah To watch this video episode on Youtube → https://youtu.be/lb2tJXopTJA  

St. Louis on the Air
STL Food Challenge puts restaurants to the test on reducing food waste

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2023 25:02


Are you guilty of bringing home leftovers only to pitch them in the trash days later? If so, you're not alone. The amount of food waste overall in our region equals the weight on nearly 1,000 adult blue whales. — 667,000 tons each year. The Green Dining Alliance and Missouri Botanical Garden partnered to see how much food could avoid landfills with specific techniques and strategies in local restaurants. We talk with people involved with the effort and with the chef/owner of a local restaurant.

StitchCast Studio
StitchCast Studio Special Edition Podcasts in the Park X

StitchCast Studio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2023 21:31


Saint Louis Story Stitchers Artists Collective presents Peace in the Prairie, an original presentation exploring the concepts of peace and violence, juxtaposing urban life as experienced by African American people living in the city of St. Louis, Missouri and the state's endangered prairie lands. Is the path towards peace through Missouri's native prairies? At Shaw Nature Reserve, the StitchCast gathers at a picnic table to talk about their first day at the Nature Reserve in this Special Edition: Podcasts in the Park X, of StitchCast Studio. Pick the City UP Art Interlude Prairie Therapy Saint Louis Story Stitchers, 2020 Recorded live at Shaw Nature Reserve, Missouri Botanical Gardens,  September 23, 2023. Story Stitchers is supported by The Lewis Prize for Music's 2021 Accelerator Award. The mission of The Lewis Prize is to partner with leaders who create positive change by investing in young people through music.  Support for Saint Louis Story Stitchers is provided by Prop S and City of St. Louis Youth at Risk Crime Prevention grant, and by Kranzberg Arts Foundation. Additional support is provided by individuals like you. Special thanks to our listeners who have lifted StitchCast Studio to Feedspot's #9 in the St. Louis region! https://blog.feedspot.com/st_louis_podcasts/

StitchCast Studio
Special Edition: Podcasts in the Park IX

StitchCast Studio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2023 23:17


Saint Louis Story Stitchers Artists Collective presents Peace in the Prairie, an original presentation exploring the concepts of peace and violence, juxtaposing urban life as experienced by African American people living in the city of St. Louis, Missouri and the state's endangered prairie lands. Is the path towards peace through Missouri's native prairies? At Shaw Nature Reserve, the StitchCast gathers at a picnic table near a campfire to talk about adapting to nature in this Special Edition: Podcasts in the Park IX, of StitchCast Studio. Pick the City UP Art Interlude To The Prairie KP Dennis and Ntegrity with Troy Anthony on bass, Saint Louis Story Stitchers, 2018 Recorded live at Shaw Nature Reserve, Missouri Botanical Gardens,  September 22, 2023 around a campfire. Story Stitchers is supported by The Lewis Prize for Music's 2021 Accelerator Award. The mission of The Lewis Prize is to partner with leaders who create positive change by investing in young people through music.  Support for Saint Louis Story Stitchers is provided by Prop S and City of St. Louis Youth at Risk Crime Prevention grant, and by Kranzberg Arts Foundation. Additional support is provided by individuals like you.

Watching America
Jonathan Losos: The Cat's Meow

Watching America

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2023 53:19


Do lions and tigers meow? Why does your cat keep leaving dead mice on the doorstep? From ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics to the vast array of modern cat breeds, the world has always had a unique relationship with cats. This week we are entering their fascinating world, with an evolutionary biologist as our guide. Jonathan Losos is an evolutionary biologist at Washington University and the founding director of the Living Earth Collaborative, a unique biodiversity center and partnership between Washington University, the Saint Louis Zoo and the Missouri Botanical Garden. But he is also a cat lover! His new book — aptly titled “The Cat's Meow,” — explores how researchers today are unraveling the secrets of cats, past and present, using all the tools of modern technology, from GPS tracking and genomics to forensic archaeology.

St. Louis on the Air
Two corpse flowers are expected to bring the funk at Missouri Botanical Garden

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023 18:52


The Missouri Botanical Garden has drawn crowds wanting to revel in the smell of the aptly named corpse flower, the amorphophallus titanum, since it first bloomed there in 2012. Its offensive odor has been likened to rotting garbage, dirty diapers and, yes… a dead body. Horticulturist Emily Colletti has cared for the garden's collection of corpse flowers for 21 years. She shared what makes the odoriferous plants happy, and how she can predict when this year's blooming flower Octavia will dazzle and stink.

Foodie Pharmacology
Teatime with Biocultural Collections Expert Aurora Prehn

Foodie Pharmacology

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2023 45:28


Are you a tea-lover? There is a dazzling array of tea types out there to taste—but you may be wondering where these teas come from and how they are made. This week, I speak with Aurora Prehn, an expert tea taster to learn more about the flavor and history of different teas. Aurora is the Biocultural Collection Manager in the William L. Brown Center at the Missouri Botanical Garden in St. Louis where she has been since January 2021.  #teatime #tea #podcast #greentea #matcha

No Set Path
EP09 - Filmmaking Abroad & Connecting w/ Josh Herum | Cinematographer

No Set Path

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2023 58:36


Josh is a St. Louis, Missouri-based Cinematographer who has shot two feature films in Nepal. He has also directed numerous music videos, narrative and documentary short films, branded content, and has been the cinematographer on projects with companies; Netflix, BBC, Meta, Sony Music, Wall Street Journal, Procter & Gamble, JAMF, Metabolic Meals, 4-H, Mission Taco Joint, Elanco, Missouri Botanical Gardens, and Barnes Jewish Hospital working with a variety of production companies and agencies.In this episode Drew & Josh talk about…- Living abroad and the influence of other cultures- Feature filmmaking in Nepal-How old connections can come back around….and much more!EPISODE LINKS: Josh's Website: joshherum.workJosh's Instagram: @joshherumdpMORE ABOUT “NO SET PATH” Website: nosetpath.com Instagram: instagram.com/nosetpath YouTube: youtube.com/@nosetpathFOLLOW DREW ENGLISH Instagram: instagram.com/drewenglishh LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/drewenglish Twitter: twitter.com/thedrewenglish Website: drewenglish.com

Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't
90 minutes of Aroids with Tom Croat

Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2023 95:23


In this episode we talk with Tom Croat of Missouri Botanical Garden, a world expert on Aroids and the family Araceae. Tom has been to over 130 countries studying this family and the immense amount of diversity in it, including their evolution, ecology, and pollination. We talk on all things Aroids, especially in the neotropics. The video accompanying this is available on the Patreon, www.Patreon.com/crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt

St. Louis on the Air
Missouri Botanical Gardens helps growers adjust to weather and climate change

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 26:55


Spring is here and gardeners are ready to get back to their yards, porches and balconies to bring life back to their dwellings. Many are hesitant to get started because of the unpredictable weather and a steadily changing climate. But the Kemper Center of Home Gardening at Missouri Botanical Garden is here to help.

The Gardenangelists
Bluebirds Flock Where Flowers Bloom

The Gardenangelists

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2023 47:20


Dee and Carol talked about stock,  asparagus, sunflowers, a new flower book, and what's going on in  Dee's garden after the fires in Oklahoma.Check out our Substack newsletter for more info about this week's episode and subscribe to get it directly in your email inbox!A few links: Carol's latest blog post about weeding. Dee's article in Oklahoma Living about how it's hard to garden in Oklahoma.Dee's Instagram post with more info about the fires and her garden.Flowers: Info on stocks from  Missouri Botanical Garden. Veggies:  Info about growing asparagus on Renee's Gardens websiteMore asparagus history and growing info in The Seed Dectective, by Adam Alexander. (Amazon link) (last week's book) and The Chef's Garden, by Farmer Lee Jones (Amazon link)On the Bookshelf: The Story of Flowers and how they change the way we live by Noel Kingsbury. (Amazon link)Our Dirt:Sunflower Steve Rabbit holes:The Creative Cove  on YouTubeOur Affiliates:Botanical InterestsFarmers DefenseEtsyTerritorial SeedsTrue Leaf Market Eden BrosBook and Amazon links are also affiliate links.Email us anytime at TheGardenangelists@gmail.com  For more info on Carol  visit her website.  Visit her blog May Dreams Gardens. For more info on Dee, visit her website.  Visit her blog Red Dirt Ramblings.Support the showOn Instagram: Carol: Indygardener, Dee: RedDirtRamblings, Our podcast: TheGardenangelists.On Facebook: The Gardenangelists' Garden Club.On YouTube.

Flower Friends
Daffodils with Jason Delaney

Flower Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 89:15


Season 4 is here, and we're kicking it off with a bang - Jason Delaney from PHS Daffodils stops by to chat about everything daffodils! Jason specializes in classic, historic, and novel varieties for garden & exhibition. I got to ask Jason about his background in flower growing - which started at a very young age in rural Illinois, and continued on into a long career with the Missouri Botanical Garden where he oversaw the flower bulb collection and travelled the world on plant collecting expeditions - to places like Siberia, Morocco, and the Republic of Georgia, looking for plants that are extremely endangered or threatened. Jason has had a life-long love of daffodils, the harbingers of spring. He grew his collection out on his family farm in Flora, Illinois, where he lifts, divides, and replants by hand every 3-5 years - it is a true labor of love. Jason shares amazing tips on planting and growing daffodils, including excellent companion plants, and discusses his breeding and growing program and his favorite daffodil characteristics. He is an absolute wealth of knowledge, with the best podcast voice imaginable, you guys are gonna love this one! Jason says that if you take nothing else from this episode, he wants you to PLANT YOUR DAFFODIL BULBS 6-8 INCHES DEEP! If planted this way, daffodils can live for hundreds of years. Plant for permanence!To purchase bulbs from PHS Daffodils, sign up for the newsletter on their website (at the bottom of the "Contact" page), and follow along on Instagram to see photos and get the up-to-date info on their plant sales - which will likely be in late May-early June this year. In addition to daffodils, Jason will also be offering day lilies from his vast collection. Subscribe to the Flower Friends pod wherever you get your podcasts, and follow along on Instagram at @flowerfriendspodcast and @growgirlseattle. And call in to our new Flower Friends hotline to leave a message that might get played on the pod: 7313-FLOWER, or 731-335-6937.

The Garden Question
101- 57 Annual & Perennial Plants Bugs Don't Bother - Jason Reeves - 101

The Garden Question

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2023 63:24


Jason Reeves knows plants and loves talking about them.He is a research horticulturist and curator for the University of Tennessee Gardens, at the West Tennessee Ag Research and Education Center in Jackson.He evaluates thousands of new and unique plants each year through out his imaginative garden art displays. Jason travels the world speaking at gardening symposiums and serving as a contributing editor to “Fine Gardening” magazine. While growing up on a farm he fell in love with the plant world. He received his Master's degree in Ornamental Horticulture and Landscape Design from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. His past experiences include work at the Opryland Conservatories, Missouri Botanical Garden, Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania, and in private gardens in New Zealand. Facebook: Jason Reeves - in the Garden                   UT Gardens Jackson

St. Louis on the Air
Endangered tarantulas seized by federal agents find new home at MoBot

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 14:19


Hundreds of illegally transported Antilles pinktoe tarantulas were intercepted by the federal government before they could enter the pet trade, and now, 98 of them reside at the Sophia M. Sachs Butterfly House in Chesterfield. Missouri Botanical Garden entomologists share what it's like to care for these endangered spiders, how they are a vital part of the ecosystem in their home country and why it's important to avoid support of the black market for exotic insects.

St. Louis on the Air
How Missouri Botanical Garden hopes to bring extinct plants back from the dead

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 28:32


Missouri Botanical Garden's Conservation Scientist Matthew Albrecht and Herbarium Director Jordan Teisher are hoping to bring extinct plants back from the dead. The two scientists are part of a global “de-extinction” project with sixty other herbaria that will result in attempting to germinate seeds of extinct plant species, some of which have not been seen alive in the wild for over a century. Producer Miya Norfleet talked with Albrecht and Teisher about the project and what it means for conservation efforts in the future.

St. Louis on the Air
Science, history and sound art coalesce in ‘Botanical Resonance' exhibition

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2023 21:31


A Missouri Botanical Garden exhibition that examines the relationship between sound and plants will close at the end of March. Nezka Pfeifer, the curator of “Botanical Resonance: Plants and Sounds in the Garden,” discusses how the exhibition reveals important things about how we interact with our environment.

St. Louis on the Air
How MoBot used plant DNA to convict a Missouri killer

St. Louis on the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 16:42


Conservation geneticist Christy Edwards never expected to use her knowledge of plant phenotyping to help solve a murder. The experience seemed more akin to a script of “Law and Order” or “CSI”: A young wife and new mother disappears, the investigators suspect her husband of foul play, and they just need the evidence to prove it. Instead of blood, mud and juniper needles become the focus — and Edwards and her colleagues at the Missouri Botanical Garden rush to collect samples and analyze over 100 trees around Mengqi Ji's burial site, evidence that ultimately ties her husband to the crime.

The Gardenangelists
Autumn, The Magic Hour in the Garden

The Gardenangelists

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2022 43:16 Very Popular


Dee and Carol discuss anemones, compact plants, and more!.Go to our Substack newsletter for more information about this week's episode. Be sure and subscribe to get the newsletter directly in your email inbox!Links:Granny Hobbies, anyone?Caro's  blog post about Oriental Bittersweet Fall blooming crocuses at  Brent & Becky's BulbsFlowers:  Anemone blanda, and Anemone hupehensis,  both described by the staff at the Missouri Botanical Garden.  Note: Brent & Becky's Bulbs carries both!The native, Anemone canadensis, available from Prairie Moon NurseryVegetables:Tomato 'Heartbreaker' from Territorial Seed Co. Two books to consider, Micro Food Gardening:Project Plans and Plants for Growing Fruits and Veggies in Tiny Spaces by Jen McGuiness (Amazon Link)  and Gardener's Guide to Compact Plants: Edibles and Ornamentals for Small Space Gardening by Jessica Walliser. (Amazon link)On the Bookshelf: Tender: A Cook and his Vegetable Patch by Nigel Slater (Amazon Link)The Chef's Garden by Farmer Lee Jones (Amazon Link) Dirt: Better Homes and Gardens Turns 100Rabbit Hole: Hopwood Hall on YouTube and the book, Downton Shabby by Hopwood DePree (Amazon link)Affiliate link to Botanical Interest Seeds. (If you buy something from them after using this link, we earn a small commission at no cost to you. This helps us continue to bring this podcast to you ad-free!)  Book links are also affiliate links.Email us anytime at TheGardenangelists@gmail.com  For more info on Carol and her books, visit her website.  Visit her blog May Dreams Gardens.For more info on Dee and her book, visit her website.  Visit her blog Red Dirt Ramblings.Don't forget to sign up for our newsletters, via our websites!

Steel Magnolias - Holding on to the good of The South

A big thank you to Tennessee Woodworks for sponsoring this episode. They are craftsman for custom farmhouse style furniture They offer a wide selection of furniture for every room of your home. Go take a look for your yourself at TennesseeWoodworks.com     We have been really busy this summer and are jumping back in to episodes with our summer highlights!       SUMMER HIGHLIGHTS:   The Memphian hotel rooftop bar: Tiger and Peacock - https://tigerandpeacockmemphis.com Missouri Botanical Garden - https://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org Peppa Pig Theme Park - https://www.peppapigthemepark.com/florida/ Magic Kingdom - https://disneyworld.disney.go.com/destinations/magic-kingdom/ Bergamot and hummingbirds Bowling Fishing with just a simple pole and a worm Ernie Greer - https://www.facebook.com/greerstncountryhams/   Want to connect? Join our Patreon Community of supporters for a Southern Sister Chat BONUS episode, perks and SWAG: https://www.patreon.com/steelmagnolias Sign up for our mailing list: https://mailchi.mp/e3cef217a5e7/sweetnews  Instagram @SteelMagnoliasPodcast   Episode Transcript: https://steelmagnoliaspodcast.com/episode/summer-highlights  

People Behind the Science Podcast - Stories from Scientists about Science, Life, Research, and Science Careers
654: Cool Research on Plant Responses to Temperature Stress - Dr. Malia Gehan

People Behind the Science Podcast - Stories from Scientists about Science, Life, Research, and Science Careers

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 32:29


Dr. Malia Gehan is an Assistant Member at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center. Her research examines how to improve crops in terms of their response to temperature stress and other abiotic stresses. She is does this through examining natural variation in plants. There are many plants that are highly resilient in different environmental conditions but are not edible. Malia is investigating how to take useful traits from these hardy, weedy plants and incorporate them into crops. Outside of science, Malia spends her free time with her two cats and her husband, who is also a scientist. They enjoy lounging around at home, as well as walking around their neighborhood near the Missouri Botanical Garden. Malia also has fun cooking, going to the movies, and watching TV. She received her undergraduate training in Biology from Willamette University and her PhD in Plant Biology from Michigan State University. Afterwards, Malia was awarded a National Science Foundation Plant Genome Initiative Postdoctoral Fellowship working at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, and she subsequently worked as a Research Scientist there before accepting her new position. Malia is with us today to tell us all about her journey through life and science.