Does your lifestyle matter if you're going to have kids?
Through the emerging field of epigenetics we are learning that the health of parents affects the health of their children. And surprisingly, this applies to the father as well as the mother.
Lamarkian theories aside, this notion goes back to the Dutch Famine of 1944-45 that revealed how nutrition can be linked to offspring.
Sundus Nizamani is a PhD researcher at the Faculty of Health, University of Canberra. You get involved with her study via her Facebook page www.facebook.com/Fit4Fertility. Fun, informative and an opportunity to learn about heath.
Interview by Rod
CSI: Crime Soil Investigation
CO2 solutions
Ignobels 2021
The Geological Journey of Food
Michael Jennions - Behavioural ecologist
Taryn Laubenstein - Evolutionary biology and science policy
The joy of Gardening with Camilla
Sustaining our city
Welcome to the Third Wave
Fixing photosynthesis, plant respiration in a changing world and rubisco, a protein with a bad attitude.
The nuclear age?
Robots and Emotions
A big picture future
Fuzzy Foundations
Farmers for Climate Action
Connected cousins, genetics, ancestry, e-cigarettes
Ten Journeys on a Fragile Planet
Climate Action in Federal Parliament
Economics of the renewable energy revolution with Andrew Blakers
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Earthfiles Podcast with Linda Moulton Howe
DNA Today: A Genetics Podcast
The Psychic Elephant Radio Podcast
Sasquatch Chronicles
Hidden Brain