¶ Intro / Opening
This BBC Podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. Du, jag skulle ju köpa några nya palpställd i lagret. Det kanske blev lite mer grejer. De hade ju allt, man hade en skribd, jag köpte en sån här, och kontorstolar, och så hade de en skit snygg typcontainer. Vi har inredning för hela arbetsplatsen. All your products out. Nej, tre dag. Sen är ni det jag som ska bli expert på att göra. Vi börjar med ett visamhälle, så får vi se. Det kan bli fler.
Säger, vi finns här när du vill spara till pensionen. För alltid. Our podcast series, Office English, is back with weekly episodes to help you improve your English at work. Learn useful phrases to boost your career in English, from setting goals to using small talk to apologizing when things go wrong. Follow the Learning English for Work podcast to listen or visit bbclearningenglish dot com.
¶ Why Animals Evolve Black and White
Hello, this is Six Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil. And I'm Becca. Neil, what do the following animals have in common? Zebras, giant pandas and magpies. That Pretty easy, Becca. They're all black and white. Right. But do you know why these animals evolved to be black and white? Hmm, I'm not so sure. Probably something about survival. That's usually the answer, isn't it? It is. The animal world is full of colour, shiny blue peacocks and bright green frogs.
But in fact, hundreds of animal species are black and white. In this episode, we'll try to find out why, while also learning some useful new words and phrases. And remember... All the vocabulary from this episode is available on our website bbclearningenglish dot com Okay, time for a question for you, Becca. According to one theory, some animals are black and white to warn potential predators that they're dangerous or they taste bad.
But what is the scientific term for this? Is it A camouflage B mimicry or C Aposmatism? I'm going to go with C just because I've never heard of that word before. Okay. I like I like your style. Some scientists think zebra's distinctive black and white stripes prevent bites from flies and other insects. Zoologist doctor Martin Howe tested this theory by covering horses, a close relative of the zebra, in stripes.
Here, Martin discusses his experiment with Caroline Steele from BBC World Service program CrowdScience. Do we know what a what it is about the stripes that's putting them off? Is it somehow like visually confusing? We originally set out to test whether maybe there were these optical illusions at play. So we did a whole bunch of tests where we tried different patterns of rugs. But it turned out that practically every high contrast pattern, every black and white pattern we used,
Almost every pattern was really effective at stopping flies. Martin conducted a whole bunch of meaning a lot of tests using different colours and patterns. Black and white stripes created an optical illusion, a visual trick that makes your eyes see things differently from how they really are. As a result, the flies were put off, they lost interest, and didn't buy it. So zebra's stripes confuse insects, telling them to look elsewhere for food.
¶ Camouflage and Multiple Explanations
But are there other reasons animals are black and white? Nobody who's seen giant pandas in a zoo would find them hard to spot. Against a grassy background they stand out easily. But seen from a distance in the snowy mountain forest where they live, black and white makes the perfect disguise. Here's Professor Tim Carrow, a world authority on animal behavior, explaining more to Caroline Steele for BBC World Services Crowd Science.
The giveaway for me was fifteen photos of giant pandas taken either fairly close up or at a distance. And in two of those photos I was unable to see anything in the picture other than rocks and snow. And then later on I realized that in fact there was a giant panda in the centre of that picture, some distance away. Immediately that that that clicked in my mind. The pandas were so well camouflaged, Tim couldn't spot them in the photos.
That's when something clicked in his mind, a phrase used when you suddenly understand something after trying for a long time. Tim understood that pandas use colour to hide. He calls this a giveaway, something that makes it easy for people to discover something secret or unknown. So, are animals black and white to repel insects like zebras? Or for camouflage, like pandas? Let's give the final word to Hannah Rowland, a researcher into another black and white animal, penguins.
Really, science never has a black and white answer. Excuse the pun about the uh with penguins being black and white. There's it's often a very complex mixture of reasons. The answer to why animals are black and white is not black and white. A situation described as black and white means one where it's easy to understand what's right and wrong. In fact, there's no one reason why animals are black and white.
Zebras avoid bites, pandas hide from predators, and some animals like skunks warn other animals they're dangerous. It all depends on the specific animal. And talking of skunks reminds me of my question, Becca. According to one theory, some animals are black and white to warn potential predators they're dangerous or taste bad. But what is the scientific term? And I choose C opossumatism because I'd never heard of it before.
Well, that's a great way of choosing and it's done well for you because you're correct. Woo!
¶ Essential English Vocabulary Review
Okay, let's recap the vocabulary we've learned starting with optical illusion, a visual trick where your eyes perceive things differently from how they really are. A whole bunch of something means a lot of something. If something puts you off, it causes you to dislike it or lose interest. A giveaway is something that makes it easy for people to discover something secret or unknown. The phrase something clicked in my mind is used when you suddenly understand something at last.
And finally, if you describe something as black and white, you mean it's easy to understand what is right and wrong. Once again our six minutes are up, but head over to our website BBC Learning English dot com for a quiz and worksheet for this episode. See you there soon, but for now it's goodbye. Goodbye.
Dej skulle köpa några nya palpsträlter till lagret. Det kanske blev lite mer grejer. De hade ju allt, hade en skribord, jag köpte en sån, och kontorstolar, och så hade de en skit snygg tippkontainer. Vi har inredning för hela arbetsplatsen. Välkommen till AIP.
