Biologist Answers More Biology Questions From Twitter
Released on 06/22/2022
@OStoned asks, Bro, how is coral an animal?
What's hits j?
Oh, hitting a joint.
So do you want me to say that?
I'm biologist and author Thor Hanson.
Today, I'll be answering your questions from Twitter.
This is Biology Support part two.
[upbeat music]
@PaulRizzo28 asks, #WildEarth do ostriches
really hide their head in the sand?
No, they don't.
It's a myth and no one's quite sure
where that myth came from.
Although, there are certain displays that male ostriches do
during the breeding season where they get down on the ground
and move their heads back and forth and sway
and show off their amazing plumage.
But at no point do they actually
burry their head in the sand.
@icedancerben aks, How do ticks latch on like that?
Well, if you ever get a chance to look closely
at the mouth of a tick, you will be horrified.
They have two little knife like blades
that cut into the flesh and then something
that looks like a tongue, but with all of these barbs on it,
so that when it's inserted,
it cannot be pulled out easily again
and that's just the beginning.
The saliva of ticks includes an anticoagulant
that prevents your blood from clotting.
It includes something to make your blood vessels expand
so that more blood comes to the wound.
And it includes an analgesic, a pain killer,
so that you won't feel a thing.
In fact, the ability of ticks
through their bite and their saliva to overcome our defenses
is one of the reasons that so many diseases
like Lymes disease take advantage of ticks.
They are free loaders relying on the ways
that ticks overcome our defenses
and giving those disease organisms a free entry point
into our bodies.
@AmandaSmithSays, Weird biology question.
Do female mammals get a monthly period?
Or do they just get their periods during the mating season?
The answer is that most female mammals
don't get a period at all.
Menstruation, as we know it in homo-sapiens,
is actually very rare in mammals.
Known just from our species and mostly a few other primates.
And they have a cycle that is called estrus,
which can occur every few days in something like a mouse,
or only a few times a year in many of the larger mammals.
They reabsorb the uterine lining rather than shedding it.
@ftblkwmn asks, Does salt really hurt slugs?
Or is that some cartoon shit?
The answer is it really does hurt the slugs.
If you've ever left a salt shaker out
in a humid environment,
you might have noticed that the salt tends to cake up.
That's because salt is very good at absorbing moisture.
And a slug is more or less like a bag of moisture.
So when you salt a slug, the salt dehydrates the slug,
it draws the water out of the skin,
desiccates the slug and kills it.
@HarryWhoover asks, How do murder hornets work?
Do you just give them a list?
So murder hornets have been in the headlines lately
because they are recently arrived in North America.
They are an Asian species, the Asian giant hornet.
And it's believed that they jumped over the Pacific Ocean,
not on their own wings,
but in shipping containers arriving probably
in the port of Vancouver, in British Columbia.
And over the border into the state of Washington.
Well, I happen to have murder hornets right here
in all three phases of their life cycle.
The larvae, the pupae, and the adult.
And we focus most of our attention on the adult
because they're large and scary and have a potent sting,
but in a lot of ways
the trouble starts right here with the larvae.
Because if you can imagine a nest,
a colony of murder hornets with hundreds,
or even thousands of these giant grubs
that are hungry all the time,
it's quite a job for the adults.
And they have developed then a particular strategy
that sets them apart.
They target other social insects
like honeybees or paper wasps,
where if they can succeed in overcoming the colony,
they can find a huge amount of food in one place
to take back to feed to the kids back home.
And that strategy has led them to evolve
this large body size with extremely thick exoskeletons
that can withstand the stingers of the insects
that they're attacking.
So, it really is the responsibility of the adults
to feed the young that has driven their evolution
to be so large and scary in the first place.
@JakeVig asks, What's the weirdest animal?
Platypus excluded.
In biology, We don't necessarily think
about animals as weird,
but we are very interested in the marvelous adaptations
that some animals come up with.
So when we're talking about finding strange ones,
we look in extreme places.
My favorite of these weird environments and odd creatures
has to do with the carcasses of whales.
What we call whale falls,
when they sink to the bottom of the ocean
and create their own little ecosystem.
And there are zombie worms that have evolved
specifically to devour the bones of whales,
but they do so without mouths.
They excrete an acid that dissolves the bones of the whales
and they live alongside bacteria
that help transfer the nutrition from those dissolved bones
inside the worm itself.
So, in biology, if you want to find strange creatures,
look in strange places.
@OStoned asks, Bro, how is coral an animal? Hits j.
So a coral is an animal, a tiny animal,
with a mouth and with little tentacles
that reach out and grab food from the water,
not all together dissimilar from something like a barnacle.
But where a barnacle lives alone,
corals live in colonies of thousands
of clone-like individuals.
And they take on elaborate shapes
to get themselves up off the ocean floor
into the water column to feed,
but also, to allow the dinoflagellates or algae
that live alongside them to photosynthesize
because the little coral polyps get some nutrition
from the photosynthesis going on in their symbiotic algae.
And that's why many corals take on shapes
that resemble plants.
They're trying to increase the surface area
of their structures so that more photosynthesis
can take place.
And we all have a connection, a surprising connection,
to corals and other shell-making creatures in everyday life.
That's because when their shells break down in the ocean,
particularly in shallow tropical seas
where corals and shell-makers are very, very common,
those sediments harden into limestone.
Which we then later mine to produce cement.
And you can track the course of the shell into the cement
by looking for something called calcium carbonate,
which is the main component of shells
and is found in cement as well.
And you can do so with the addition of hydrochloric acid,
which dissolves that calcium carbonate
producing bubbles of carbon dioxide alongside water.
You can see it in the shell
and you can see it in the cement.
Which means of course, that surprisingly enough,
even in our most built in environments,
we're never really that far from a tropical beach.
@KingKaiju8 asks, #Botony #Biology,
Question for all you plant-centric scientists.
Are there any plants with pleasant common names,
but are instead deadly and or toxic?
The answer is yes and I happen to have the seeds
of one of them right here.
These come from a plant pleasantly enough called
the rosary pea.
And it is in the pea family
and they do use these beautiful black and red seeds
to make rosaries and other forms of jewelry.
But the plant is deadly, deadly toxic.
One seed well chewed is enough to kill a person.
@FaunaGrace asks, Do bulls really hate the color red?
The answer is no, they don't hate the color red.
They can't even see the color red.
You could irritate a bull with a polka dot cape
or a brown cape just as easily.
It is the motion that attracts their attention.
The color red was chosen, one,
because it's showy and it may please the audience,
and two, for a more grizzly purpose,
it hides the blood stains that the injured bull might leave
as it passes underneath.
@JPetrou97 asks, For viruses,
the goal is to continue to spread and manufacture
by utilizing a host. What good is a dead host?
Therefore, is there any reason to believe
COVID would mutate to be more deadly
as opposed to more transmissible, but less deadly?
Well, the short answer is yes,
we expect that a virus over its history in a population
will eventually mutate into something less deadly
and very transmissible because that is in the best interest
of the virus itself.
But of course, mutations are random events.
So there is still the chance that COVID or other viruses,
particularly when they're new in a population
to have a mutation that produces something more severe.
@Hobvicore asks, Are the cells of an elephant
bigger than the cells of a rat? Explain why or why not.
Well, the answer is no.
There are limits to how big a cell can grow,
whether it's in a rat or an elephant.
Because cells, like any living thing,
they need fuel and they produce waste.
And the way that they get those things
into and out of the cell
is through a process called diffusion.
So if you get too large of a cell,
it becomes inefficient and you can't get the stuff
all the way into the middle of the cell
where it is required.
Interestingly enough, one of the only creatures out there
to get around that limitation of diffusion,
is a particular group of very small organisms,
certain bacteria, that have developed bubbles, if you will,
within the cell called vacuoles
that push all of the essential parts of the cell
closer to that cell wall.
Allowing the cell to grow larger and still be serviced
by the process of diffusion from the outside.
So are the cells of an elephant larger
than the cells of a rat?
The answer is no.
@IslandFanGirl1 asks,
Why will a mother bird abandon its chick
if touched by a human?
Well, the answer is they don't. That's a common myth.
Many studies that use tagging of young birds
rely on going to the nest, applying a small tag to the bird,
and then of course, returning it to the nest
and allowing the mother to raise that bird to maturity.
Now that's not to say we should all go out
and start touching baby birds,
but it does point out that most birds
have a very high loyalty to their eggs and to their chicks
while they're raising them.
And even if those nests are disturbed
by us or by a potential predator or what have you,
the adult birds will most likely return and finish the job.
@alamedamark asks, Question for biologists.
Is there any other species that attacks its own species
as frequently as humans do?
The answer is yes, there are all sorts of species
that attack members of their own species in nature.
Consider the praying mantis
where the female will happily decapitate the male
after population and eat the male
to provide a free meal and more energy
for raising up her brood of eggs.
Or consider lingcods and various fishes
that are perfectly happy to eat smaller individuals
of their own species.
They choose their meals by size,
not by whether or not they're related.
But if we want to look for examples
of planned attacks in nature,
it helps to look at one of our closest relatives,
the chimpanzees who are known to organize raids
from one neighboring band to another neighboring band
with the express purpose of finding isolated individuals
and attacking them and even killing them.
That is a grizzly behavior,
but one that we can look upon with some familiarity
because we see it in our own species.
@Elmostwitter asks, Question for biologists.
Is it possible to bring back extinct species?
If so, how? #Bilogoy.
Extinction really is, for the most part, forever.
That said, there are efforts underway
to bring back certain species that have DNA preserved
in a frozen state.
For example, woolly mammoths where there is at least
some recognizable DNA in the carcasses
that are still available in the frozen tundras
of the far north.
So there is some sort of Jurassic Park
style biology going on to bring back some of those species.
However, there are situations where species
go extinct in the wild, but then can be reintroduced later
after some sort of captive breeding project.
One of the most exciting to entomologists, at least,
examples of this has to do with a creature
called the tree lobster.
A giant stick insect found on Lord Howe Island
in the Tasman Sea and considered extinct for over a century
until a few dozen individuals were found
eeking out a tiny existence on a rocky spire
just off the coast.
They were gathered, they were bred in captivity,
and they now number in the thousands.
And biologists are just waiting for the day
they can reintroduce them to Lord Howe Island
after they eradicate the rats
that got them into trouble in the first place.
@YourFriendTina asks, Why is wildlife conservation,
as a career, kind of looking sexy rn?
Well, is it looking sexy?
That's great news for wildlife conservationists.
The field of wildlife conservation
may appear sexy or may appear booming to you right now
because it's more important than ever before.
As wild areas and natural areas and biodiversity diminish,
the role of conserving what's left
becomes more and more important.
And we do have some success stories to look to
and to inspire us as well.
Consider, for example, the California condor.
Nearly extinct decades ago.
So rare that the last few individuals
were trapped from the wild, bread in captivity for decades,
and are now slowly being released
back into their former habitat.
Flying over Northern California,
places where there huge wingspans
have been missing for decades.
So those are all the questions we have for today.
A wonderful mixture of questions, by the way.
Thank you for watching Biology Support.
Gordon Ramsay Answers Cooking Questions From Twitter
Ken Jeong Answers Medical Questions From Twitter
Bill Nye Answers bet365体育赛事 Questions From Twitter
Blizzard's Jeff Kaplan Answers Overwatch Questions From Twitter
Nick Offerman Answers Woodworking Questions From Twitter
Bungie's Luke Smith Answers Destiny Questions From Twitter
Jackie Chan & Olivia Munn Answer Martial Arts Questions From Twitter
Scott Kelly Answers Astronaut Questions From Twitter
LaVar Ball Answers Basketball Questions From Twitter
Dillon Francis Answers DJ Questions From Twitter
Tony Hawk Answers Skateboarding Questions From Twitter
Jerry Rice Answers Football Questions From Twitter
Garry Kasparov Answers Chess Questions From Twitter
U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Athletes Answer Olympics Questions From Twitter
Neuroscientist Anil Seth Answers Neuroscience Questions From Twitter
Blizzard's Ben Brode Answers Hearthstone Questions From Twitter
John Cena Answers Wrestling Questions From Twitter
The Slow Mo Guys Answer Slow Motion Questions From Twitter
Bill Nye Answers Even More bet365体育赛事 Questions From Twitter
James Cameron Answers Sci-Fi Questions From Twitter
Best of Tech Support: Bill Nye, Neil DeGrasse Tyson and More Answer bet365体育赛事 Questions from Twitter
Riot Games' Greg Street Answers League of Legends Questions from Twitter
Riot Games' Greg Street Answers Even More League of Legends Questions from Twitter
PlayerUnknown Answers PUBG Questions From Twitter
Liza Koshy, Markiplier, Rhett & Link, and Hannah Hart Answer YouTube Creator Questions From Twitter
NCT 127 Answer K-Pop Questions From Twitter
Neil deGrasse Tyson Answers bet365体育赛事 Questions From Twitter
Ken Jeong Answers More Medical Questions From Twitter
Bon Appétit's Brad & Claire Answer Cooking Questions From Twitter
Bang Bang Answers Tattoo Questions From Twitter
Ed Boon Answers Mortal Kombat 11 Questions From Twitter
Nick Jonas and Kelly Clarkson Answer Singing Questions from Twitter
Penn Jillette Answers Magic Questions From Twitter
The Russo Brothers Answer Avengers: Endgame Questions From Twitter
Alex Honnold Answers Climbing Questions From Twitter
Sloane Stephens Answers Tennis Questions From Twitter
Bill Nye Answers bet365体育赛事 Questions From Twitter - Part 3
Astronaut Nicole Stott Answers Space Questions From Twitter
Mark Cuban Answers Mogul Questions From Twitter
Ubisoft's Alexander Karpazis Answers Rainbow Six Siege Questions From Twitter
Marathon Champion Answers Running Questions From Twitter
Ninja Answers Fortnite Questions From Twitter
Cybersecurity Expert Answers Hacking Questions From Twitter
Bon Appétit's Brad & Chris Answer Thanksgiving Questions From Twitter
SuperM Answers K-Pop Questions From Twitter
The Best of Tech Support: Ken Jeong, Bill Nye, Nicole Stott and More
Twitter's Jack Dorsey Answers Twitter Questions From Twitter
Jodie Whittaker Answers Doctor Who Questions From Twitter
Astronomer Jill Tarter Answers Alien Questions From Twitter
Tattoo Artist Bang Bang Answers More Tattoo Questions From Twitter
Respawn Answers Apex Legends Questions From Twitter
Michael Strahan Answers Super Bowl Questions From Twitter
Dr. Martin Blaser Answers Coronavirus Questions From Twitter
Scott Adkins Answers Martial Arts Training Questions From Twitter
Psychiatrist Daniel Amen Answers Brain Questions From Twitter
The Hamilton Cast Answers Hamilton Questions From Twitter
Travis & Lyn-Z Pastrana Answer Stunt Questions From Twitter
Mayim Bialik Answers Neuroscience Questions From Twitter
Zach King Answers TikTok Questions From Twitter
Riot Games Answers League of Legends Questions from Twitter
Aaron Sorkin Answers Screenwriting Questions From Twitter
Survivorman Les Stroud Answers Survival Questions From Twitter
Joe Manganiello Answers Dungeons & Dragons Questions From Twitter
"Star Wars Explained" Answers Star Wars Questions From Twitter
Wizards of the Coast Answer Magic: The Gathering Questions From Twitter
"Star Wars Explained" Answers More Star Wars Questions From Twitter
VFX Artist Answers Movie & TV VFX Questions From Twitter
CrossFit Coach Answers CrossFit Questions From Twitter
Yo-Yo Ma Answers Cello Questions From Twitter
Mortician Answers Cadaver Questions From Twitter
Babish Answers Cooking Questions From Twitter
Jacob Collier Answers Music Theory Questions From Twitter
The Lord of the Rings Expert Answers More Tolkien Questions From Twitter
Wolfgang Puck Answers Restaurant Questions From Twitter
Fast & Furious Car Expert Answers Car Questions From Twitter
Former FBI Agent Answers Body Language Questions From Twitter
Olympian Dominique Dawes Answers Gymnastics Questions From Twitter
Allyson Felix Answers Track Questions From Twitter
Dr. Michio Kaku Answers Physics Questions From Twitter
Former NASA Astronaut Answers Space Questions From Twitter
Surgeon Answers Surgery Questions From Twitter
Beekeeper Answers Bee Questions From Twitter
Michael Pollan Answers Psychedelics Questions From Twitter
Ultramarathoner Answers Questions From Twitter
Bug Expert Answers Insect Questions From Twitter
Former Cult Member Answers Cult Questions From Twitter
Mortician Answers MORE Dead Body Questions From Twitter
Toxicologist Answers Poison Questions From Twitter
Brewmaster Answers Beer Questions From Twitter
Biologist Answers Biology Questions From Twitter
James Dyson Answers Design Questions From Twitter
Dermatologist Answers Skin Questions From Twitter
Dwyane Wade Answers Basketball Questions From Twitter
Baker Answers Baking Questions from Twitter
Astrophysicist Answers Questions From Twitter
Age Expert Answers Aging Questions From Twitter
Fertility Expert Answers Questions From Twitter
Biological Anthropologist Answers Love Questions From Twitter
Mathematician Answers Math Questions From Twitter
Statistician Answers Stats Questions From Twitter
Sleep Expert Answers Questions From Twitter
Botanist Answers Plant Questions From Twitter
Ornithologist Answers Bird Questions From Twitter
Alex Honnold Answers MORE Rock Climbing Questions From Twitter
Former FBI Agent Answers MORE Body Language Questions From Twitter
Waste Expert Answers Garbage Questions From Twitter
Garbage Boss Answers Trash Questions From Twitter
J. Kenji López-Alt Answers Cooking Questions From Twitter
Veterinarian Answers Pet Questions From Twitter
Doctor Answers Gut Questions From Twitter
Chemist Answers Chemistry Questions From Twitter
Taste Expert Answers Questions From Twitter
Paleontologist Answers Dinosaur Questions From Twitter
Biologist Answers More Biology Questions From Twitter
Biologist Answers Even More Biology Questions From Twitter
ER Doctor Answers Injury Questions From Twitter
Toxicologist Answers More Poison Questions From Twitter
Energy Expert Answers Energy Questions From Twitter
BBQ Pitmaster Answers BBQ Questions From Twitter
Neil Gaiman Answers Mythology Questions From Twitter
Sushi Chef Answers Sushi Questions From Twitter
The Lord of the Rings Expert Answers Tolkien Questions From Twitter
Audiologist Answers Hearing Questions From Twitter
Marine Biologist Answers Shark Questions From Twitter
Bill Nye Answers bet365体育赛事 Questions From Twitter - Part 4
John McEnroe Answers Tennis Questions From Twitter
Malcolm Gladwell Answers Research Questions From Twitter
Financial Advisor Answers Money Questions From Twitter
Stanford Computer Scientist Answers Coding Questions From Twitter
Wildlife Vet Answers Wild Animal Questions From Twitter
Climate Scientist Answers Earth Questions From Twitter
Medical Doctor Answers Hormone Questions From Twitter
James Hoffmann Answers Coffee Questions From Twitter
Video Game Director Answers Questions From Twitter
Robotics Professor Answers Robot Questions From Twitter
Scam Fighters Answer Scam Questions From Twitter
Forensics Expert Answers Crime Scene Questions From Twitter
Chess Pro Answers Questions From Twitter
Former FBI Agent Answers Body Language Questions From Twitter...Once Again
Memory Champion Answers Questions From Twitter
Neuroscientist Answers Illusion Questions From Twitter
Immunologist Answers Immune System Questions From Twitter
Rocket Scientists Answer Questions From Twitter
How Vinyl Records Are Made (with Third Man Records)
Neurosurgeon Answers Brain Surgery Questions From Twitter
Therapist Answers Relationship Questions From Twitter
Polyphia's Tim Henson Answers Guitar Questions From Twitter
Structural Engineer Answers City Questions From Twitter
Harvard Professor Answers Happiness Questions From Twitter
A.I. Expert Answers A.I. Questions From Twitter
Pizza Chef Answers Pizza Questions From Twitter
Former CIA Chief of Disguise Answers Spy Questions From Twitter
Astrophysicist Answers Space Questions From Twitter
Cannabis Scientist Answers Questions From Twitter
Sommelier Answers Wine Questions From Twitter
Mycologist Answers Mushroom Questions From Twitter
Genndy Tartakovsky Answers Animation Questions From Twitter
Pro Card Counter Answers Casino Questions From Twitter
Doctor Answers Lung Questions From Twitter
Paul Hollywood & Prue Leith Answer Baking Questions From Twitter
Geneticist Answers Genetics Questions From Twitter
Sneaker Expert Jeff Staple Answers Sneaker Questions From Twitter
'The Points Guy' Brian Kelly Answers Travel Questions From Twitter
Master Chef Answers Indian Food & Curry Questions From Twitter
Archaeologist Answers Archaeology Questions From Twitter
LegalEagle's Devin Stone Answers Law Questions From Twitter
Todd McFarlane Answers Comics Questions From Twitter
Reptile Expert Answers Reptile Questions From Twitter
Mortician Answers Burial Questions From Twitter
Eye Doctor Answers Eye Questions From Twitter
Computer Scientist Answers Computer Questions From Twitter
Neurologist Answers Nerve Questions From Twitter
Hacker Answers Penetration Test Questions From Twitter
Nutritionist Answers Nutrition Questions From Twitter
Experts Predict the Future of Technology, AI & Humanity
Doctor Answers Blood Questions From Twitter
Sports Statistician Answers Sports Math Questions From Twitter
Shark Tank's Mark Cuban Answers Business Questions From Twitter
Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 Director Answers Video Game Questions From Twitter
Criminologist Answers True Crime Questions From Twitter
Physicist Answers Physics Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Chess Pro Answers More Questions From Twitter
The Police's Stewart Copeland Answers Drumming Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Ancient Rome Expert Answers Roman Empire Questions From Twitter
Mathematician Answers Geometry Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Toy Expert Answers Toy Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Pepper X Creator Ed Currie Answers Pepper Questions From Twitter
Mineralogist Answers Gemstone Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Jacob Collier Answers Instrument & Music Theory Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Mechanical Engineer Answers Car Questions From Twitter
Dermatologist Answers More Skin Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Egyptologist Answers Ancient Egypt Questions From Twitter
Cardiologist Answers Heart Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Marine Biologist Answers Fish Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Real Estate Expert Answers US Housing Crisis Questions | Tech Support
Paleoanthropologist Answers Caveman Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED
Zack Snyder Answers Filmmaking Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Survivalist Answers Survival Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Celebrity Trainer Answers Workout Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Primatologist Answers Ape Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Psychiatrist Answers Mental Health Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Maya Expert Answers Maya Civilization Questions From Twitter | Tech Support
Biomedical Scientist Answers Pseudoscience Questions From Twitter
Violinist Answers Violin Questions From Twitter
Lando Norris & Oscar Piastri Answer Formula 1 Questions From Twitter
Medievalsist Professor Answers Medievals Questions From Twitter
Stock Trader Answers Stock Market Questions From Twitter
Pyrotechnician Answers Fireworks Questions From Twitter
Storm Chaser Answers Severe Weather Questions From Twitter
Professor Answers Ancient Greece Questions From Twitter
AI Expert Answers Prompt Engineering Questions From Twitter
Etiquette Expert Answers Etiquette Questions From Twitter
'Pod Save America' Hosts Answer Democracy Questions From Twitter
Roller Coaster Engineer Answers Roller Coaster Questions From Twitter
Urban Designer Answers City Planning Questions From Twitter
Joey Chestnut Answers Competitive Eating Questions From Twitter
Aerospace Engineer Answers Airplane Questions From Twitter
Microbiologist Answers Microbiology Questions From Twitter
Viking Age Expert Answers Viking Questions From Twitter
Volcanologist Answers Volcano Questions From Twitter
Private Investigator Answers PI Questions
Neuroscientist Answers Emotion Questions
Historian Answers Wild West Questions
Linguist Answers Word Origin Questions
Historian Answers Witchcraft Questions
Scammer Payback Answers Scam Questions
Urban Designer Answers More City Planning Questions
Historian Answers Pirate Questions
Cult Deprogrammer Answers Cult Questions
Historian Answers Samurai Questions
Demographics Expert Answers Population Questions
Air Crash Investigator Answers Aviation Accident Questions
Arctic Explorer Answers Polar Expedition Questions
Presidential Historian Answers Presidency Questions
Pregnancy Doctor Answers Pregnancy Questions
Paleontologist Answers Extinction Questions
Football Historian Answers Football Questions
Biomedical Scientist Answers New Pseudoscience Questions
Psychologist Answers Couples Therapy Questions