Our Changing World

Dr Claire Concannon follows scientists into the bush, over rivers, back to their labs and many places in-between to cover the most fascinating research being done in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Hosted and produced by Claire Concannon and Ellen Rykers

A stylised photograph of a paua shell mimicking the image of 'earth' with the podcast title 'our changing world' on top.

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The advances in MRI coming out of Gisborne

The MRI technique advances coming out of the Mātai Medical Research Institute in Gisborne have been described as ‘pioneering’, ‘groundbreaking’ and ‘world leading’. Claire Concannon speaks to chief executive and research director Dr Samantha Holdsworth to learn why, and about their big plans for the future.
New episode
A woman with long hair in a cardigan and long skirt stands in front of a large white cylindrical machine with a stretcher-sized opening in the middle.

The fight for the forest and the fernbird

About two hours south of Dunedin, in the Catlins, the Tautuku and Fleming rivers flow into the sea at Tautuku beach. Covered in native bush from headwaters to the ocean, this special catchment is home to many native, and some threatened, plants and animals. But there’s an ongoing battle. Browsing animal such as deer and pigs are destroying the undergrowth, while feral cats and stoats are predating on critters such as the mātātā, the South Island fernbird. We meet some of the people fighting back.
A brown and grey speckled bird sits among brown and green reed stalks.

Lead bullets - a health risk for humans and kea

Every year in New Zealand, recreational hunters shoot more than half a million wild game. Most are shot with lead-based ammunition. Now, researchers are investigating what happens to that lead, and how much of it is getting into the food chains of humans and the endangered kea. Alison Ballance speaks to scientists at Nelson-Marlborough Institute of Technology, and kea conservationists and predator control experts at the Department of Conservation to learn more.
An olive-coloured parrot with a large beak sitting on top of a rock covered with rusty red lichen.

Can birds adapt their nest building for a warming world?

To keep their eggs safe, some birds build simple cup-shaped nests. Others craft elaborate fully enclosed domes, with porches, fake entrances and ledges. But is this intricate construction of nests a set, encoded behaviour? Or can birds adapt in different conditions? Researchers are keen to learn about flexibility in nest design, to better understand how different species might be able to respond as the climate changes.
A small cup-shaped bird nest attached to a branch with a dead leaf next to it. Peeking outside the top of the nest are three small downy chicks, grey-brown in colour with yellow beaks.

Why we are still monitoring the ozone hole

Almost 40 years on from the first reports of the Antarctic ozone hole, and 35 years since the Montreal Protocol to ban CFCs came into effect, what’s going on with the ozone hole? How does it form? How do we measure it? And having solved the CFC problem, why are we still monitoring ozone so closely? Claire Concannon heads to NIWA's Atmospheric Research Station in Lauder, Central Otago, to find out.
Two figures wearing long orange coats with orange hoods hold a large white balloon in front of a concrete wall and a collection of gas canisters.

Looking after our four-legged friends

We love our four-legged friends. It’s estimated about a third of New Zealand households share their home with at least one dog, and two thirds of dog owners consider their furry friends to be family members. Some dogs work, others keep us company, make us laugh, get us walking twice a day, and shower us with unconditional affection….. But are we looking after all their needs? Claire Concannon speaks with a dog welfare expert about the science behind how we know our dogs love us, and what to do to make sure we are looking after them.
A man in a brown sweater smiles broadly as he lifts up his large fluffy white dog, a samoyed. They are both looking at the camera and standing in a grassy field in front of a large building.

Anxiety and the brain-body connection

We all experience anxiety – when our brains look into the future and imagine bad things happening. It’s normal and has helped keep us alive as a species. But levels of anxiety are rising, particularly in young people, and at the severe end of the spectrum clinical anxiety prevents people from going about their lives. This Mental Health Awareness Week we meet a team of researchers at the University of Otago investigating the brain-body connection in anxiety, and how different potential treatments might help.
Two women with long dark hair and glasses smile and sit next to a laptop on a metal trolley in front of a white wall. On the tray underneath the laptop is a complex machine with a long tube, that the woman on the right is holding in her hands.

The teamwork that solved a life-and-death puzzle

It’s been almost 30 years since a team joined forces to investigate a particularly aggressive form of stomach cancer that was afflicting one Tauranga whānau. Kimi Hauora Health and Research Clinic in Tauranga and University of Otago geneticists together found the cancer-causing genetic change, helping save thousands of lives worldwide. Justine Murray is at Mangatawa Marae with Maybelle McLeod and Erin Gardiner to reflect on that time, and Professor Parry Guilford discusses those first formative years.
A woman in a navy blue sweater smiles while standing in front of a marae wharenui framed by two tall trees. It's a sunny day and there are green hills behind the marae buildings.

Some of the light we cannot see

This week, we’re hanging out in the terahertz area of the light spectrum. Sandwiched between infrared light and microwaves, terahertz has been the long-forgotten cousin of the light family. But no longer! At the Australian Synchrotron, intense and focused beams of terahertz light are used to test new materials for carbon capture, clean energy applications, and the next generation of computing.
A woman wearing blue rubber gloves carefully handles a small piece of metal equipment attached to a long contraption on a bench covered with tinfoil.

The 'science shed' across the ditch

Electrons! High speeds! Intense beams of light! Claire Concannon takes a tour of our nearest particle accelerator – the Australian Synchrotron in Melbourne. Designed to create high-energy x-ray light useful for science, the synchrotron enables an incredible diversity of research. And, because of long-standing funding support, New Zealand scientists can also use it. Claire finds out what interesting research questions some visiting New Zealanders are shining a light on.
A woman with curly hair and glasses holds up a thimble-sized metal pin. She is standing in front of complicated looking machinery in a lab.

Genomics and the future of gene technology in Aotearoa

Advances in the field of genomics (the study of DNA and genomes) have meant big leaps in our ability to sequence, understand and manipulate the genomes of living things. Damian Christie explores research happening now in New Zealand in this area. Plus, with a recent announcement that the government is introducing new legislation, what’s next for the regulation of gene technologies in Aotearoa?
A close up of a hand manoeuvring a pipette and dropping a clear liquid onto a plastic rectangular device .

What else can we learn from wastewater

Wastewater testing became part of our daily lives during the Covid-19 pandemic, but what else can it tell us about what’s happening in our communities? From looking for illicit drugs, to monitoring alcohol consumption and health biomarkers, Claire Concannon meets scientists tapping into the rich research potential of what’s in our pee.
Two women in white lab coats stands in a lab next to a large machine with about a dozen large glass bottles half-filled with clear liquid sitting on top of it.

Imagining the next generation of robofish

They will look like fish, swim like fish and even sense like fish. Liz Garton meets a research team designing robofish and smart wetsuits to monitor the state of our oceans.
A torpedo shaped black machine sits on a silver metal stand, with sharp white teeth drawn on, and fin like things sticking out from the top and bottom.

Our musical minds

Making and processing music is something unique to human brains, says Dr Sam Mehr. But why are we so attuned to rhythms, melodies and matching tones? Claire and Sam take a deep dive into the universal language of music, and how our minds make sense of it.
A man sitting at a desk looking at two computer monitors. One is showing brightly coloured waveforms. There is a microphone on the desk.

Bonus: Kākāpō update with Dr Andrew Digby

Bonus episode
Claire Concannon and Dr Andrew Digby talk about all things kākāpō: that habitat trial and where the birds are now, the next breeding season, and Andrew's hopes for the future of this iconic manu.
A close in shot of a kākāpō standing on a branch.

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