Science Magazine Podcast

A team effort to save a giant fish, the power of moonlight, and how scientists can navigate a tough political environment

4 snips
May 7, 2026
Timothy Snyder, historian and author focused on civic resistance and professional ethics. Carlos Camacho, nocturnal-bird researcher who studies moonlight effects on nightjars. Warren Cornwall, environmental reporter covering community arapaima conservation in the Amazon. They discuss community-led recovery of a giant fish, how moonlight shapes nightjar feeding and migration, and how scientists can navigate political threats to institutions and ethics.
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INSIGHT

Fish Management Rebuilt Community Life

  • Arapaima management created communal work, festivals, and new economic roles that strengthened social cohesion.
  • Research documented increased female economic participation and reduced incentive to migrate to cities.
INSIGHT

Paying Protectors Creates Scalable Incentives

  • Scientists pushed for financial compensation for villagers protecting biodiversity, framing it like carbon or biodiversity credits.
  • Brazil launched a pilot to pay about $3 million to 5,000 people across 400 villages managing arapaima.
INSIGHT

Moonlight Shapes Nocturnal Foraging

  • The moon strongly structures nocturnal animals' behavior because many species are visually adapted to dim light.
  • Lack of moonlight (new moon) reduces foraging efficiency for visual nocturnal predators like nightjars.
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