{"podcast":{"title":"Buzz Blossom & Squeak","slug":"buzz-blossom-squeak-6817827","podcast_index_feed_id":6817827,"rss_url":"https://feeds.captivate.fm/buzz-blossom-squeak/","website_url":"https://buzzblossomandsqueak.com/","image_url":"https://artwork.captivate.fm/6bf1b4ca-8682-42ea-b3f5-b4caa5685cb9/bbslogo2.jpg","author":"Jill McKinley","episode_count":115,"summary":"Buzz, Blossom & Squeak is a quiet, curious walk into the natural world right outside your door. You don’t need to be a scientist, a hardcore birder, or someone who hikes miles into the wilderness. This podcast is for anyone who has ever paused to notice a bird call, wondered about a plant growing along a sidewalk, watched insects move through a garden, or felt the seasons shifting without quite knowing why. Each episode focuses on small, approachable pieces of nature—birds, bugs, plants, weather, ecosystems, and natural patterns—explained in a way that’s calm, curious, and grounded in observation. Instead of rushing toward big conclusions, Buzz, Blossom & Squeak invites you to slow down and really notice what’s happening in the living world around you. You’ll hear about things like: How birds use different layers of trees and sky Why certain plants grow where they do What insects are actually doing when they buzz past How seasons quietly reshape landscapes The hidden systems that connect soil, water, plants, and animals The goal isn’t mastery—it’s familiarity. Nature becomes less overwhelming when you take it one small step at a time. This podcast is especially for people who: Wan…","last_synced_at":null,"page_url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/buzz-blossom-squeak-6817827"},"episode":{"title":"102 - Why Can Animals Eat Things That Would Kill Us?","slug":"102-why-can-animals-eat-things-that-would-kill-us","published_at":"2026-02-26T02:25:00+00:00","page_url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/buzz-blossom-squeak-6817827/102-why-can-animals-eat-things-that-would-kill-us","show_page_url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/buzz-blossom-squeak-6817827","url":"https://buzz-blossom-squeak.captivate.fm/episode/102-why-can-animals-eat-things-that-would-kill-us","audio_url":"https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/666798bd-38d5-429a-b7b3-b0f710314445.mp3","summary":"Have you ever watched a dog eat something off the ground and thought — I would be in the hospital right now? Or stared at a koala stuffing eucalyptus leaves into its face and wondered how that's even possible? Today I'm digging into one of those questions that just sits with you — why can animals eat things we simply can't? The answer is genuinely fascinating, and once you understand it, you'll see the animals in your backyard in a completely different way. Specialists vs. Generalists: The Big Idea Every animal on Earth is essentially a custom-built system, optimized for a very specific food supply in a very specific environment. A bear living in the forest has exactly the enzymes, gut bacteria, and stomach chemistry needed to process fish, berries, roots, and the occasional deer. We humans are something different — we're generalists. We eat a huge variety of things, including cooked food, which semi-processes our meals and makes calories more accessible without requiring the long, specialized digestive machinery that many animals carry. That generalist toolkit is part of what supports our higher brain function. We gave up dietary specialization in exchange for cognitive power. Enzymes: The Chemical Workers Inside Enzymes are proteins your body manufactures to break down food — tiny, specific workers in your digestive tract. The key word is specific. Different animals have entirely different enzyme profiles. The koala is the perfect example: eucalyptus is toxic to most mammals, including us, but koalas have liver enzymes specifically designed to neutralize those compounds. It's essentially a built-in detox filter. Monarch butterflies do something similar with milkweed — not only tolerating the toxin, but storing it in their bodies so that anything that eats them gets s…","meta_description":"Have you ever watched a dog eat something off the ground and thought — I would be in the hospital right now? Or stared at a koala stuffing eucalyptus leav…","key_points":[],"chapters":[],"topics":[],"duration_seconds":1066,"processing_state":"not_requested","actions":[{"name":"request_transcript","method":"POST","url":"https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/buzz-blossom-squeak-6817827/episodes/102-why-can-animals-eat-things-that-would-kill-us/transcription-requests","description":"Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode."},{"name":"read_markdown","method":"GET","url":"https://stenobird.com/podcast/buzz-blossom-squeak-6817827/102-why-can-animals-eat-things-that-would-kill-us.md","description":"Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource."}]}}