Tom's SciCast

Let's explore the universe while pushing the limits of what we know with our imaginations, some speculation, philosophy, and science fiction. A podcast about all things science. Stay Curious!

73. The Modern Synthesis of Evolution

I explain how the Modern Synthesis led to our current understanding of evolution. I also discuss the current issues in evolution including epigenetics, horizontal gene transfer, and abiogenesis and the need for a unified theory of life. Send us a text

06-27
45:56

72. Sex, Sexual Reproduction, and Sexual Selection

A continuation on the mechanisms of evolution with a focus on sexual selection. I also define, sexual reproduction, two sexes, sexual selection, and provide examples of sexual selection. Send us a text

06-24
54:29

71. Mechanisms of Evolution II: genetic drift, recombination, mutations

I focus on the mechanisms of random evolution and how mutations and recombination not only cause evolution but are important sources of variation. Send us a text

06-22
54:37

70. Mechanisms of Evolution I: Natural selection

In this podcast, I explain the different types of natural selection including directional selection, stabilizing selection, disruptive selection, balancing selection, and a brief introduction to sexual selection. Send us a text

06-22
41:48

69. What is a species?

I explain why defining species is difficult and describe four species concepts including morphological, biological, polyphasic, and phylogenetic species concept. Send us a text

06-21
35:55

68. Cellular respiration

This is Chapter 7 of my Bio for Health Sciences text book. I cover cellular respiration, including why it's important, the four stages of respiration, and finally a quick ending with fermentation. Send us a text

05-16
01:40:59

67. Energy, Membranes, Transport, and Metabolism

This is Chapter 6 of my bio for health sciences text book. In this chapter, I cover a variety of related topics including: The structure and function of cell membranes, cellular transport (osmosis, diffusion, facilitated diffusion, and active transport), Energy, Redox reactions, and enzymes. Send us a text

04-16
02:05:34

66. Cells are the Basic Unit of Life

This is Chapter 5 of my Bio for Health Sciences text book. It covers the similarities of all cells due to common ancestry, introduces prokaryotic diversity, eukaryotic diversity, the endomembrane system, and the cytoskeleton. Send us a text

04-11
01:41:13

65. The Chemistry of Life

This podcast is Chapter 4 of my book Biology for Health Sciences. Life is based on chemistry and it helps to know a little to help us in our everyday lives, like why some fats are good while others are bad or why glucose and fructose are both real sugar. In this chapter, I cover metabolism, the four macromolecules (carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids, and lipids) and other vitamins and organic molecules Send us a text

04-08
01:39:36

64. The Ingredients of Life

This podcast is the 3rd chapter of my text book, Biology for Health Sciences. I cover the structure of atoms, the origins of the elements, chemical bonding, why carbon is the element of life, water, Ph, and the why this matters in our daily lives. Send us a text

04-06
01:32:38

63. The Gray Areas of Life: Misconceptions and Discoveries

Tom unpacks the complex definitions of life and challenges common misconceptions about living organisms, from mules and parasites to viruses. Listeners gain insights into the key characteristics that define life while exploring philosophical questions surrounding it. Send us a text

02-27
30:49

62. Themes in Science: From Emergent Properties to Evolution

This is Chapter 2 of my textbook, Biology for Health Sciences, a college freshman course for students entering nursing, nutrition, exercise science, environmental science, or other careers in the health field. Topics include; what is life, the hierarchy of life, emergent properties, ecology, and evolution Send us a text

10-15
01:21:33

61. A Biologists Looks at 50: Reflections from 30 years of doing science

A look back on my life in science, birds, fish, invasive species, streams, dams, and climate change and sleeping lizards. Send us a text

04-05
01:02:48

60. The Fermi paradox, aliens, biology, evolution

Where is every one? Why haven't we been visited by alien races, made contact with aliens, or even discovered a hint of an alien race? Ever since Fermi asked this simple question, people have been coming up with answers as to why we don't see aliens. Some solutions are scary, but I think a potential answer could be found by looking at our own solar system. Send us a text

03-13
59:37

59. Why we should colonize the solar system

I believe humans are special and improve our chances of surviving as a species, I explain why we should colonize the solar system and beyond. Send us a text

03-02
37:01

58. The Silurian Hypothesis, evolution, civilizations, aliens, and the legacy of humanity.

I explore how the Silurian Hypothesis provides insight into what it takes for a planet to host or evolve a civilization, how we might detect them, and the legacy of humans on Earth. Send us a text

11-26
45:51

57. Life, aliens, opinions, and other things I've been thinking about lately

After 6 months, I'm back! I talk about how some of my views have changed to become more nuanced and how my own biases shape the way I think about astrobiology. Send us a text

10-12
40:26

56. Do the laws of nature make life likely to occur and evolution progressive?

In researching astrobiology for my up coming book, I've started to view the evolution of life and civilizations in a paradigm shifting way that challenges the very basics of our understanding of evolution. Listen in as I explain why I think evolution is progressive. Send us a text

03-27
40:40

55. What makes an animal different from all other life?

What makes animals different from all other organisms? I discuss the evolutionary origins and unique features of animals along with a few other fun facts. And find out why I don't think sponges are animals. Send us a text

03-10
41:18

54. Plants have relationships too!

The more I learn about plants, the more I'm amazed. From insects to fungus and bacteria, plants form many relationships. Some plants even talk to each other through the air or underground, while others form three-way relationships with ants and fungus. Send us a text

03-03
39:35

Recommend Channels