1 00:00:13,320 --> 00:00:15,800 Speaker 1: Part one why it's the way it is. 2 00:00:18,960 --> 00:00:22,040 Speaker 2: Today, we're going to talk about fish, and we're going 3 00:00:22,120 --> 00:00:27,280 Speaker 2: to talk about two different ways in which fish can 4 00:00:27,400 --> 00:00:30,360 Speaker 2: use their habitats, like the ways they can use the 5 00:00:30,400 --> 00:00:35,360 Speaker 2: places they live and how to utilize their landscape or 6 00:00:35,400 --> 00:00:39,959 Speaker 2: let's say, their waterscape in order to have their babies. 7 00:00:43,200 --> 00:00:45,200 Speaker 2: So what we're going to talk about are these these 8 00:00:45,320 --> 00:00:49,400 Speaker 2: terms that seem complicated and hard to say and hard 9 00:00:49,400 --> 00:00:51,720 Speaker 2: to spell. The two terms of this. The first one 10 00:00:51,760 --> 00:00:55,760 Speaker 2: is anadromous. Okay, I'm going to spell it for you, 11 00:00:55,840 --> 00:00:58,760 Speaker 2: so you know A N A d r O m 12 00:00:58,840 --> 00:01:03,880 Speaker 2: o u S. An adremist. An anadremus has a has 13 00:01:03,920 --> 00:01:11,160 Speaker 2: an opposite. The opposite of anagamus is catadroumous catasromus, So 14 00:01:11,200 --> 00:01:14,320 Speaker 2: that one is C A T A d r O 15 00:01:14,560 --> 00:01:18,399 Speaker 2: m o u S. We're going to start by talking 16 00:01:18,520 --> 00:01:21,080 Speaker 2: about the first one, the one that starts with an A, 17 00:01:21,560 --> 00:01:28,160 Speaker 2: which is anadromous. An anagamous fish is a fish that 18 00:01:28,600 --> 00:01:33,120 Speaker 2: lives its life out in the ocean and then goes 19 00:01:33,280 --> 00:01:39,520 Speaker 2: up a river in order to reproduce. I think the 20 00:01:39,600 --> 00:01:44,319 Speaker 2: most classic example of an anadromous fish is a salmon. Okay, 21 00:01:45,080 --> 00:01:47,880 Speaker 2: in our country, in the United States of America, we 22 00:01:48,080 --> 00:01:52,840 Speaker 2: have six kinds of salmon. There are five salmon in 23 00:01:52,880 --> 00:01:56,200 Speaker 2: the Pacific Ocean, and there's just one kind of salmon, 24 00:01:56,240 --> 00:01:59,280 Speaker 2: the Atlantic salmon, that lives in the Atlantic Ocean. If 25 00:01:59,280 --> 00:02:02,320 Speaker 2: you're curious about the five in the Pacific, I'll tell 26 00:02:02,320 --> 00:02:04,120 Speaker 2: you what they are. They all have two names, two 27 00:02:04,160 --> 00:02:08,280 Speaker 2: common names. You have king salmon, which are called chinook. 28 00:02:09,040 --> 00:02:14,840 Speaker 2: You have silver salmon, which people also call coho. You 29 00:02:14,919 --> 00:02:21,560 Speaker 2: have pink salmon, which people call humpies. You have sake salmon, 30 00:02:21,880 --> 00:02:26,480 Speaker 2: which people will call reds, and you have chum salmon, 31 00:02:26,760 --> 00:02:29,720 Speaker 2: which people will call dog salmon. So those are the 32 00:02:29,760 --> 00:02:33,000 Speaker 2: five salmon in the Pacific Ocean that go up the 33 00:02:33,120 --> 00:02:36,679 Speaker 2: rivers in our country. And there's that one salmon, the 34 00:02:36,720 --> 00:02:39,120 Speaker 2: Atlantic salmon the Atlantic Ocean. All these fish are a 35 00:02:39,160 --> 00:02:43,000 Speaker 2: nagamus fish. And here's what that means. They are born 36 00:02:43,080 --> 00:02:47,080 Speaker 2: in rivers. Okay, they're born in freshwater. So as an egg, 37 00:02:47,120 --> 00:02:50,480 Speaker 2: they're a fertilized egg. And these fertilized eggs will lay 38 00:02:50,520 --> 00:02:52,760 Speaker 2: down in the gravel on the bottom of a river, 39 00:02:53,400 --> 00:02:56,920 Speaker 2: and eventually that fertilized egg will hatch into a little 40 00:02:57,160 --> 00:03:00,640 Speaker 2: baby fish that you know it surprisingly within a few 41 00:03:00,760 --> 00:03:03,760 Speaker 2: days of hatching, you'd kind of recognize it as a 42 00:03:03,760 --> 00:03:09,560 Speaker 2: little fish. Different species of salmon, so different kinds of 43 00:03:09,600 --> 00:03:14,160 Speaker 2: salmon will spend different amounts of time in the rivers 44 00:03:14,400 --> 00:03:18,760 Speaker 2: where they hatched or were born. Pink salmon and chum 45 00:03:18,840 --> 00:03:22,160 Speaker 2: salmon will go out right away pretty quickly. They go 46 00:03:22,240 --> 00:03:23,840 Speaker 2: back out to the ocean where they're going to live 47 00:03:23,880 --> 00:03:27,400 Speaker 2: their lives. A saki salmon, which is a Pacific salmon, 48 00:03:27,440 --> 00:03:31,959 Speaker 2: a sackey salmon, will find its way to a lake, 49 00:03:32,280 --> 00:03:36,280 Speaker 2: so they're dependent on lake systems being along the rivers 50 00:03:36,280 --> 00:03:39,240 Speaker 2: where they reproduce, and they'll spend one to two years 51 00:03:39,280 --> 00:03:43,320 Speaker 2: in a lake freshwater lake before going out to the ocean. 52 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:48,000 Speaker 2: A chinook or king salmon might spend about five months 53 00:03:48,080 --> 00:03:50,560 Speaker 2: in a freshwater river before going out to live its 54 00:03:50,600 --> 00:03:54,560 Speaker 2: life in the ocean, and a coho salmon will stand 55 00:03:54,600 --> 00:03:58,920 Speaker 2: its freshwater river for over a year. Overund the Atlantic Ocean, 56 00:03:58,920 --> 00:04:01,480 Speaker 2: the Atlantic salmon will day up and it's freshwater river 57 00:04:01,920 --> 00:04:06,360 Speaker 2: for two or three years. All of these different salmon, 58 00:04:06,400 --> 00:04:10,680 Speaker 2: all these different anadromous fish will then grow up out 59 00:04:10,720 --> 00:04:13,160 Speaker 2: in the ocean. They grow big out in the ocean. 60 00:04:14,160 --> 00:04:19,120 Speaker 2: Chinook salmon might get up to fifty pounds, sixty pounds, 61 00:04:19,160 --> 00:04:23,479 Speaker 2: seventy pounds. Coho salmon can grow up to twenty pounds 62 00:04:23,480 --> 00:04:26,640 Speaker 2: out in the ocean. Sake salmon, you know, they might 63 00:04:26,680 --> 00:04:29,680 Speaker 2: be eight to twelve pounds out in the ocean. Pinks 64 00:04:29,680 --> 00:04:31,440 Speaker 2: are a little bit smaller, but they'll go out in 65 00:04:31,440 --> 00:04:36,680 Speaker 2: the ocean until there's several pounds. Eventually the fish out 66 00:04:36,720 --> 00:04:40,359 Speaker 2: in the ocean will reach maturity. Okay, it'll get about 67 00:04:40,400 --> 00:04:43,200 Speaker 2: as big as it's going to get. And then it's 68 00:04:43,240 --> 00:04:46,479 Speaker 2: time for that fish to complete the life cycle. And 69 00:04:46,560 --> 00:04:49,840 Speaker 2: it's time for that fish to go up the river. 70 00:04:49,960 --> 00:04:51,839 Speaker 2: And they usually go up the same river to the 71 00:04:51,880 --> 00:04:54,880 Speaker 2: same place where they were born, and they travel from 72 00:04:54,920 --> 00:04:58,520 Speaker 2: the ocean back into the fresh water, and they go 73 00:04:58,760 --> 00:05:02,560 Speaker 2: up the river and they lay their eggs. The females 74 00:05:02,640 --> 00:05:05,360 Speaker 2: lay the eggs, and the males fertilize the eggs. So 75 00:05:05,400 --> 00:05:08,080 Speaker 2: they have grown big and live their lives out in 76 00:05:08,120 --> 00:05:11,520 Speaker 2: the ocean, and then they go up to complete their 77 00:05:11,520 --> 00:05:15,160 Speaker 2: life cycle and reproduce. In the case of these Pacific salmon, 78 00:05:15,560 --> 00:05:18,160 Speaker 2: when they go up to reproduce, these anagamous fish, when 79 00:05:18,160 --> 00:05:20,520 Speaker 2: they go up the river, it's the final journey they 80 00:05:20,560 --> 00:05:24,920 Speaker 2: will make. They die up that river, and Atlantic salmon 81 00:05:25,440 --> 00:05:28,279 Speaker 2: is able to go up the river and reproduce and 82 00:05:28,320 --> 00:05:31,200 Speaker 2: it will survive. It can live and go back out 83 00:05:31,560 --> 00:05:34,760 Speaker 2: into the ocean. And those are all anagamous fish. And 84 00:05:34,760 --> 00:05:37,440 Speaker 2: that's just some of the anagamous fish. Other anagamous fish 85 00:05:37,480 --> 00:05:41,480 Speaker 2: that you might have heard of. Striped bass will live 86 00:05:41,520 --> 00:05:43,640 Speaker 2: their lives out in the ocean, but they'll go up 87 00:05:43,640 --> 00:05:48,320 Speaker 2: into rivers and estuaries in order to reproduce. The American 88 00:05:48,440 --> 00:05:51,800 Speaker 2: shad is an anagamous fish. Lives its life out in 89 00:05:51,839 --> 00:05:56,080 Speaker 2: the ocean, and it'll go up into a river to reproduce, 90 00:05:56,160 --> 00:05:58,720 Speaker 2: and that's where it's born before moving back out into 91 00:05:58,720 --> 00:06:02,120 Speaker 2: the ocean. There's a thing called a sea run cutthroat trout, 92 00:06:02,160 --> 00:06:05,840 Speaker 2: So this is a cutthroat trout that lives its life 93 00:06:05,880 --> 00:06:09,640 Speaker 2: out in the ocean and goes upper river to spawn. 94 00:06:11,839 --> 00:06:14,480 Speaker 2: There are some anagamous fish that are kind of surprising 95 00:06:14,600 --> 00:06:18,040 Speaker 2: or maybe things you haven't heard of. There is a fish, 96 00:06:18,400 --> 00:06:22,280 Speaker 2: it's an eel like fish called a lamprey, and it's 97 00:06:22,360 --> 00:06:25,760 Speaker 2: what's called a jawless fish. They have little suckers on 98 00:06:25,800 --> 00:06:29,560 Speaker 2: their mouth. Lampreys will live their lives out in the 99 00:06:29,600 --> 00:06:31,640 Speaker 2: ocean when they're out in the ocean. How they survive 100 00:06:31,800 --> 00:06:35,960 Speaker 2: is they latch onto other fish and suck the juices 101 00:06:36,000 --> 00:06:38,360 Speaker 2: and bloods out of other fish, and that's what they 102 00:06:38,400 --> 00:06:41,520 Speaker 2: feed on. But when it's time for them to lay 103 00:06:41,520 --> 00:06:43,240 Speaker 2: their eggs, they're an agamus. 104 00:06:43,279 --> 00:06:43,440 Speaker 3: Right. 105 00:06:43,480 --> 00:06:45,120 Speaker 2: When it's time for them to lay their eggs, they 106 00:06:45,120 --> 00:06:49,680 Speaker 2: go up the rivers and reproduce. But now let's talk 107 00:06:49,720 --> 00:06:55,080 Speaker 2: about that opposite. If you remember, anadamous has an opposite. 108 00:06:55,120 --> 00:07:02,320 Speaker 2: The opposite of anadremus is catadromous fish is a fish 109 00:07:02,400 --> 00:07:07,000 Speaker 2: that lives its life up in the rivers Okay, lives 110 00:07:07,040 --> 00:07:10,800 Speaker 2: its life in fresh water and goes out to the 111 00:07:10,800 --> 00:07:15,800 Speaker 2: ocean to reproduce. We only have on our continent, on 112 00:07:15,840 --> 00:07:21,400 Speaker 2: our continent of North America, we only have one catadromous fish. 113 00:07:21,960 --> 00:07:25,520 Speaker 2: The catatumous fish we have is called the American eel, 114 00:07:25,960 --> 00:07:30,640 Speaker 2: and American eels live in the Atlantic Ocean, so they 115 00:07:30,680 --> 00:07:33,520 Speaker 2: live on the eastern side of our country. On the 116 00:07:33,560 --> 00:07:37,760 Speaker 2: eastern coast of our country. Eels will live in the 117 00:07:37,880 --> 00:07:41,280 Speaker 2: rivers all the way up into what's called the maritime 118 00:07:41,360 --> 00:07:43,960 Speaker 2: provinces of Canada. So if you go to Maine and 119 00:07:44,000 --> 00:07:46,680 Speaker 2: go north to Maine, those parts of Canada and north 120 00:07:46,720 --> 00:07:51,520 Speaker 2: of Maine, they'll be called the maritime provinces. Those areas 121 00:07:51,520 --> 00:07:55,000 Speaker 2: have American eels. And then American eels live all down 122 00:07:55,080 --> 00:07:58,480 Speaker 2: the Eastern coast. So you go from Maine down into 123 00:07:58,600 --> 00:08:03,880 Speaker 2: New York, and you keep going down to Virginia, North Carolina, Florida. Okay, 124 00:08:04,160 --> 00:08:09,880 Speaker 2: all that is American eel territory. The Caribbean Islands, so Cuba, 125 00:08:10,000 --> 00:08:13,520 Speaker 2: Puerto Rico, and on and on, they all have American eels. 126 00:08:13,960 --> 00:08:17,400 Speaker 2: There's that little part of South America, what would be 127 00:08:17,480 --> 00:08:21,280 Speaker 2: the north east portion of South America that forms kind 128 00:08:21,280 --> 00:08:24,800 Speaker 2: of the bottom of the Caribbean Ocean or the southwest 129 00:08:25,080 --> 00:08:28,520 Speaker 2: part of the Caribbean Ocean. They have American eels there. 130 00:08:28,960 --> 00:08:32,160 Speaker 2: So it's a huge area that these eels all exist in, 131 00:08:32,280 --> 00:08:36,120 Speaker 2: but we call them American eels. They are again a 132 00:08:36,120 --> 00:08:41,720 Speaker 2: catagumous fish. So these eels are born out in the 133 00:08:41,760 --> 00:08:45,840 Speaker 2: Atlantic Ocean. There's an area called the Sargasso Sea, and 134 00:08:45,920 --> 00:08:49,280 Speaker 2: it seems like all the eels from all those places 135 00:08:49,320 --> 00:08:51,920 Speaker 2: I described, it seems that they all go to the 136 00:08:52,000 --> 00:08:56,319 Speaker 2: Sargasso Sea to reproduce and when their babies hatch, their 137 00:08:56,320 --> 00:09:00,400 Speaker 2: babies just little larva and these larva are just first 138 00:09:00,440 --> 00:09:03,000 Speaker 2: by the ocean's currents. They're not at first, they're not 139 00:09:03,080 --> 00:09:07,319 Speaker 2: able to move themselves. They can't swim. They're just dispersed 140 00:09:07,600 --> 00:09:10,640 Speaker 2: all over the place by ocean currents, by just waves 141 00:09:10,640 --> 00:09:13,960 Speaker 2: and wind and currents pushing them around. And they get 142 00:09:13,960 --> 00:09:17,240 Speaker 2: dispersed and they start to grow a little bit bigger, 143 00:09:17,280 --> 00:09:19,800 Speaker 2: and they'll turn into a thing called an elver or 144 00:09:19,840 --> 00:09:24,000 Speaker 2: a thing called a glass eel. And these eels will 145 00:09:24,040 --> 00:09:27,080 Speaker 2: start picking their way up rivers, so the same way 146 00:09:27,120 --> 00:09:30,679 Speaker 2: that salmon babies will start making their way down rivers, 147 00:09:30,679 --> 00:09:32,920 Speaker 2: because they're going to go live their lives in the ocean. 148 00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:35,200 Speaker 2: They're going to mature and become adults in the ocean. 149 00:09:35,679 --> 00:09:40,840 Speaker 2: These eels start making their way up rivers where they 150 00:09:40,880 --> 00:09:43,240 Speaker 2: travel up, up, up. They can stay in the big 151 00:09:43,280 --> 00:09:46,120 Speaker 2: parts of the rivers, they can stand in estuaries near 152 00:09:46,160 --> 00:09:49,199 Speaker 2: the ocean. They can go way up rivers and enter 153 00:09:49,240 --> 00:09:54,040 Speaker 2: little creeks and ditches and marshes. They can go anywhere, 154 00:09:54,040 --> 00:09:56,080 Speaker 2: and they'll live their whole lives up in the fresh 155 00:09:56,080 --> 00:10:00,120 Speaker 2: water up in these rivers, creeks and marshes. And then 156 00:10:00,280 --> 00:10:04,280 Speaker 2: later when they reach sexual maturity, they will do their 157 00:10:04,480 --> 00:10:09,920 Speaker 2: migration and their migration is down river. So in a 158 00:10:09,920 --> 00:10:11,839 Speaker 2: lot of parts of their range, a lot of places 159 00:10:11,840 --> 00:10:14,960 Speaker 2: where they live, they will wait till late summer and 160 00:10:15,000 --> 00:10:19,959 Speaker 2: they will migrate down river. They will travel across the 161 00:10:19,960 --> 00:10:23,280 Speaker 2: ocean to the place where they all meet up to reproduce, 162 00:10:23,800 --> 00:10:27,200 Speaker 2: and those eels will reproduce and they will die and 163 00:10:27,240 --> 00:10:32,319 Speaker 2: their babies will repeat that journey. So again, the American 164 00:10:32,400 --> 00:10:37,160 Speaker 2: eel as a catasumous fish. And there are lots of 165 00:10:37,200 --> 00:10:41,240 Speaker 2: anagamous fish, but the most obvious examples that all of 166 00:10:41,280 --> 00:10:46,240 Speaker 2: us have heard about are salmon. Salmon are anagamous. The 167 00:10:46,280 --> 00:10:48,679 Speaker 2: American eel is catatromous. 168 00:10:56,960 --> 00:10:59,240 Speaker 4: Part two, Guess that critter. 169 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:03,480 Speaker 5: It's time for Guess that critter. Where we play animal sounds, 170 00:11:03,520 --> 00:11:06,199 Speaker 5: and you've got to guess what animal is making those sounds. 171 00:11:06,520 --> 00:11:09,080 Speaker 5: You'll learn some neat facts about these animals and develop 172 00:11:09,120 --> 00:11:11,560 Speaker 5: your ear to better identify their sounds in the wild 173 00:11:11,920 --> 00:11:14,840 Speaker 5: or in this case, maybe in your attic too. And 174 00:11:14,920 --> 00:11:18,040 Speaker 5: don't worry, we'll throw in some clues along the way. Now, 175 00:11:18,280 --> 00:11:31,360 Speaker 5: listen closely, because these predatory birds are highly active during twilight, 176 00:11:31,679 --> 00:11:35,040 Speaker 5: meaning they're crepuscular. They're more likely to be seen and 177 00:11:35,080 --> 00:11:38,800 Speaker 5: heard making their signature call at dusk and dawn. Both 178 00:11:38,840 --> 00:11:41,880 Speaker 5: males and females make this call, although the male's call 179 00:11:42,120 --> 00:11:45,800 Speaker 5: is slightly lower in pitch. The call has different meanings 180 00:11:45,840 --> 00:11:48,880 Speaker 5: from marking territory to announcing the presence of a predator. 181 00:11:56,520 --> 00:11:59,000 Speaker 5: If you're out in thick woods or swampy areas, you 182 00:11:59,080 --> 00:12:02,720 Speaker 5: might observe them in mature trees using hollow cavities at 183 00:12:02,840 --> 00:12:06,120 Speaker 5: least sixteen feet off the ground, usually cavities that were 184 00:12:06,120 --> 00:12:10,240 Speaker 5: abandoned by other creatures such as squirrels or raccoons. Or 185 00:12:10,480 --> 00:12:13,920 Speaker 5: you might spot them swooping up prey anything from rodents 186 00:12:14,000 --> 00:12:19,880 Speaker 5: like mice to rabbits and opossums, as well as other birds, frogs, lizards, snakes, fish, crabs, 187 00:12:19,960 --> 00:12:24,280 Speaker 5: and even some insects. These birds are monogamous, meaning a 188 00:12:24,360 --> 00:12:27,559 Speaker 5: pair mates for life, but they don't necessarily stay together 189 00:12:27,600 --> 00:12:30,520 Speaker 5: when not raising young. This is the sound of a 190 00:12:30,600 --> 00:12:33,920 Speaker 5: male and female together in courtship, which you're likely to 191 00:12:33,920 --> 00:12:37,120 Speaker 5: hear during the breeding season that runs from December through March. 192 00:12:48,120 --> 00:12:51,720 Speaker 5: Now here's some rocous duetting. A Meat Eater podcast listener 193 00:12:51,760 --> 00:12:55,160 Speaker 5: sent us this audio from Connecticut. It's likely two separate 194 00:12:55,200 --> 00:12:58,360 Speaker 5: pairs facing off at the boundary of their territories. These 195 00:12:58,440 --> 00:13:01,559 Speaker 5: critters are very territory, especially when they're taking care of 196 00:13:01,600 --> 00:13:23,000 Speaker 5: their babies. Here are some babies calling to their parents. 197 00:13:24,400 --> 00:13:38,760 Speaker 5: Sh Okay, it's time for the reveal. It's a barred owl, 198 00:13:39,040 --> 00:13:43,040 Speaker 5: otherwise known as a hoot owl. The barred owl's signature 199 00:13:43,080 --> 00:13:45,920 Speaker 5: hood of eight or nine notes sounds like who cooks 200 00:13:45,960 --> 00:13:50,079 Speaker 5: for you? Who cooks for you all. Historically, their range 201 00:13:50,080 --> 00:13:54,000 Speaker 5: spanned across forested country in eastern North America, but the 202 00:13:54,040 --> 00:13:58,160 Speaker 5: owls have been steadily expanding their range westward. One interesting 203 00:13:58,200 --> 00:14:00,400 Speaker 5: thing about bard owls is that they don't seem to 204 00:14:00,400 --> 00:14:03,480 Speaker 5: mind humans, and at times even appear to demonstrate an 205 00:14:03,559 --> 00:14:07,280 Speaker 5: interest in humans and human structures. Their tolerance for people 206 00:14:07,280 --> 00:14:09,360 Speaker 5: could help explain why they're turning up in more and 207 00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:13,520 Speaker 5: more places as increased human development displaces other species of 208 00:14:13,520 --> 00:14:17,199 Speaker 5: owls that are more shy. Oh, and here's one last thing. 209 00:14:17,760 --> 00:14:20,400 Speaker 5: There's a tradition of turkey hunters using the barred owls 210 00:14:20,440 --> 00:14:22,720 Speaker 5: call to get a shock gobble from a turkey to 211 00:14:22,760 --> 00:14:26,080 Speaker 5: determine its location. Why don't you give it a try? 212 00:14:27,560 --> 00:14:32,720 Speaker 3: Part three trivia And now it's time for meat eater 213 00:14:32,880 --> 00:14:33,600 Speaker 3: kids trivia. 214 00:14:33,920 --> 00:14:37,440 Speaker 1: The other only game show where conservation always wins. This 215 00:14:37,480 --> 00:14:39,960 Speaker 1: is a quiz show for kids who love the outdoors. 216 00:14:40,560 --> 00:14:41,720 Speaker 1: Take it away, Spencer. 217 00:14:43,200 --> 00:14:48,080 Speaker 4: Today, I'm joined by Jimmy, Rosie, matthew ain, A, Mabel, Hayden, Conley, Reid, 218 00:14:48,160 --> 00:14:51,640 Speaker 4: and Bay. Each player will earn ten dollars for conservation 219 00:14:51,760 --> 00:14:54,440 Speaker 4: with every question they get right today. There's a potential 220 00:14:54,480 --> 00:14:56,640 Speaker 4: for this room to earn up to two hundred and 221 00:14:56,640 --> 00:14:59,720 Speaker 4: seventy dollars this week. That donation is going to the 222 00:14:59,800 --> 00:15:03,080 Speaker 4: Land and Access Initiative, which provides more access to public 223 00:15:03,160 --> 00:15:06,840 Speaker 4: lands for hunting, fishing, hiking, camping, swimming, and whatever else 224 00:15:06,880 --> 00:15:09,440 Speaker 4: you like to do outdoors. Let's see how much money 225 00:15:09,600 --> 00:15:13,680 Speaker 4: our players can raise. Question one, Which of these animals 226 00:15:13,880 --> 00:15:18,600 Speaker 4: would not be found in Lake Erie? Is it alligator, Canada, 227 00:15:18,640 --> 00:15:25,160 Speaker 4: goose or largemouth bass? Which of these animals would not 228 00:15:25,280 --> 00:15:31,640 Speaker 4: be found in Lake Erie? Alligator, Canada, goose or largemouth bass? 229 00:15:33,520 --> 00:15:38,440 Speaker 4: Pretty quick answers? Jimmy, you got this one right, Yes, sir? 230 00:15:39,200 --> 00:15:40,680 Speaker 4: How about Mabel? You got this one right? 231 00:15:40,840 --> 00:15:41,280 Speaker 2: I think so? 232 00:15:41,520 --> 00:15:41,800 Speaker 5: Okay? 233 00:15:42,680 --> 00:15:45,440 Speaker 4: Alligator, Canada, goose, largemouth bass? Is everybody ready? 234 00:15:45,680 --> 00:15:45,880 Speaker 1: Yeah? 235 00:15:46,000 --> 00:15:46,160 Speaker 5: Yeah? 236 00:15:46,240 --> 00:15:49,240 Speaker 4: Quick to answer? Go ahead and reveal your answers. 237 00:15:49,320 --> 00:15:53,440 Speaker 3: Aina alligator, Rosie alligator, Bye largemouth. 238 00:15:52,920 --> 00:15:54,880 Speaker 4: Bass, Mabel alligator. 239 00:15:54,440 --> 00:15:58,360 Speaker 3: Jimmy alligator, read alligator, Matthew alligator. 240 00:15:57,960 --> 00:16:05,320 Speaker 4: Conley Hayden alligator. The correct answer is alligator. A few 241 00:16:05,400 --> 00:16:09,640 Speaker 4: folks got it right. The closest alligator habitat to Lake 242 00:16:09,680 --> 00:16:12,600 Speaker 4: Erie is about four hundred and fifty miles to the 243 00:16:12,720 --> 00:16:16,360 Speaker 4: south in North Carolina. Gators can survive and water down 244 00:16:16,400 --> 00:16:19,720 Speaker 4: to about forty degrees fahrenheit, so they wouldn't like Lake 245 00:16:19,760 --> 00:16:22,320 Speaker 4: Erie anyway. Have you ever seen a gator? 246 00:16:23,520 --> 00:16:23,760 Speaker 1: Yes? 247 00:16:23,800 --> 00:16:27,800 Speaker 4: Where'd you see a gator at Louisiana? Okay? I heard 248 00:16:27,800 --> 00:16:30,800 Speaker 4: that the Putellis family is going to North Carolina. Are 249 00:16:30,800 --> 00:16:33,280 Speaker 4: there gators in North Carolina? I don't know. 250 00:16:33,680 --> 00:16:35,800 Speaker 2: You just said they were, did I? 251 00:16:36,160 --> 00:16:36,400 Speaker 1: Yeah? 252 00:16:36,480 --> 00:16:40,160 Speaker 4: Yeah, I literally just said that there are gators in 253 00:16:40,200 --> 00:16:45,040 Speaker 4: North Carolina. Good point, Mabel, the student has become the teacher. 254 00:16:45,320 --> 00:16:47,920 Speaker 4: I was just testing you guys, actually, and you passed. 255 00:16:48,160 --> 00:16:48,680 Speaker 2: Sure you were. 256 00:16:49,080 --> 00:16:52,920 Speaker 4: I was making sure everyone's listening. Question two, how often 257 00:16:53,200 --> 00:16:56,160 Speaker 4: is there a full moon? Is it every ten days, 258 00:16:56,600 --> 00:17:03,000 Speaker 4: every twenty days, or every thirty days? We got speed 259 00:17:03,040 --> 00:17:05,440 Speaker 4: answers in the room. I think they know this one. 260 00:17:06,520 --> 00:17:10,159 Speaker 4: How often is there a full moon? Every ten days, 261 00:17:10,720 --> 00:17:15,720 Speaker 4: every twenty days, every thirty days, Jimmy and Mabel giving 262 00:17:15,760 --> 00:17:18,040 Speaker 4: each other a thumbs up. You guys like each other's answer. 263 00:17:18,400 --> 00:17:19,520 Speaker 5: No, I wasn't doing about that. 264 00:17:19,560 --> 00:17:21,280 Speaker 3: I was just saying for correcting, you know, I thought 265 00:17:21,320 --> 00:17:21,879 Speaker 3: that was funny. 266 00:17:21,920 --> 00:17:25,480 Speaker 4: Oh okay. Your dad has a similar attitude. 267 00:17:25,720 --> 00:17:25,959 Speaker 3: I think. 268 00:17:26,200 --> 00:17:28,600 Speaker 4: I think it's it brings him more joy than like 269 00:17:28,680 --> 00:17:31,080 Speaker 4: watching you kids grow up. If your dad can get 270 00:17:31,080 --> 00:17:35,359 Speaker 4: one over on me, he's just giddy. Does everybody have 271 00:17:35,440 --> 00:17:41,160 Speaker 4: an answer? Yes, go ahead and reveal your answers. Aina thirty, 272 00:17:41,400 --> 00:17:47,320 Speaker 4: Rosie uh twenty, Bay twenty, Mabel thirty, Jimmy thirty, Read thirty, 273 00:17:47,400 --> 00:17:54,320 Speaker 4: Matthew twenty, Conley thirty, Hayden thirty. The correct answer is 274 00:17:54,480 --> 00:17:58,600 Speaker 4: every thirty days. Some of you got it right. I 275 00:17:58,640 --> 00:18:00,360 Speaker 4: think we had every answer reper ended. 276 00:18:00,400 --> 00:18:00,600 Speaker 5: Though. 277 00:18:00,840 --> 00:18:03,800 Speaker 4: Full moons come around every twenty nine point five days, 278 00:18:03,800 --> 00:18:06,359 Speaker 4: so about once a month. A blue moon is the 279 00:18:06,480 --> 00:18:09,800 Speaker 4: second full moon in a month where there's two full moons. 280 00:18:10,000 --> 00:18:12,840 Speaker 4: Because February is only twenty eight or twenty nine days, 281 00:18:12,960 --> 00:18:15,840 Speaker 4: it never has a blue moon. Sometimes it actually has 282 00:18:15,880 --> 00:18:18,520 Speaker 4: a black moon, which is when there's no full moon 283 00:18:18,840 --> 00:18:21,119 Speaker 4: in the whole month. Have any guys ever heard the 284 00:18:21,160 --> 00:18:24,040 Speaker 4: saying about once in a blue moon? Yes, do you 285 00:18:24,040 --> 00:18:24,680 Speaker 4: know what that means? 286 00:18:25,560 --> 00:18:26,200 Speaker 5: No? 287 00:18:26,200 --> 00:18:29,919 Speaker 4: No, please take a gift? Yeah, yeah, exactly, be like uh, 288 00:18:30,280 --> 00:18:33,640 Speaker 4: Steve Vernella wins trivia once in a blue moon. That'd 289 00:18:33,680 --> 00:18:38,959 Speaker 4: be an example of something very rare that happens. Scoreboard Buddy, 290 00:18:39,080 --> 00:18:43,200 Speaker 4: question that's right, question three? Thank you Matthew. This next 291 00:18:43,240 --> 00:18:45,560 Speaker 4: great question comes via Joe Walcott. If you have a 292 00:18:45,600 --> 00:18:47,760 Speaker 4: question you think is right for Meat Eater Kids Trivia, 293 00:18:47,840 --> 00:18:50,600 Speaker 4: send it to Kids Trivia at the meadeater dot com. 294 00:18:50,840 --> 00:18:53,960 Speaker 4: What kind of animal is a puma? Is it a shark, 295 00:18:54,520 --> 00:19:00,399 Speaker 4: a cougar, or a turkey? What kind of animal is 296 00:19:00,440 --> 00:19:05,680 Speaker 4: a puma, shark, cougar, turkey? This is maybe the most 297 00:19:05,680 --> 00:19:09,000 Speaker 4: confident I've seen the room. We may have a perfect 298 00:19:09,640 --> 00:19:13,440 Speaker 4: score among us. Conley, you got this one right, Yeah, 299 00:19:13,560 --> 00:19:14,800 Speaker 4: you know this one for sure. 300 00:19:15,000 --> 00:19:16,280 Speaker 2: I know this one for sure. 301 00:19:16,400 --> 00:19:20,240 Speaker 4: Okay, counting on you bet you got this one right. 302 00:19:20,480 --> 00:19:22,800 Speaker 4: I got this seem to like your answer. How about Reid, 303 00:19:22,880 --> 00:19:23,680 Speaker 4: you got this one right? 304 00:19:23,840 --> 00:19:24,119 Speaker 1: Yeah? 305 00:19:24,240 --> 00:19:24,720 Speaker 3: Okay. 306 00:19:25,080 --> 00:19:28,280 Speaker 4: Our players think that they are going to have ninety 307 00:19:28,359 --> 00:19:32,240 Speaker 4: dollars for sure on this answer. It's everybody ready, yes, 308 00:19:32,600 --> 00:19:34,120 Speaker 4: go ahead and reveal your answers. 309 00:19:34,359 --> 00:19:39,800 Speaker 3: We have any saying cougar, Rosie Bee cougar, Mabel cougar, 310 00:19:39,960 --> 00:19:44,760 Speaker 3: Jimmy cougar, Reid cougar, Matthew cougar, Conley cougar, Hayden cougar. 311 00:19:44,840 --> 00:19:47,359 Speaker 4: They got it. The correct answer is cougar. That's the 312 00:19:47,400 --> 00:19:50,480 Speaker 4: first time we've ever had all of our players get 313 00:19:50,520 --> 00:19:54,199 Speaker 4: the right answer. Cougar's actually hold the Guinness World Record 314 00:19:54,280 --> 00:19:57,320 Speaker 4: for most nicknames for an animal. They say it has 315 00:19:57,400 --> 00:20:02,760 Speaker 4: over forty nicknames, including mountain lion, panther, catamount painter, and 316 00:20:02,920 --> 00:20:09,359 Speaker 4: deer tiger. What do you guys like to call mountain line? 317 00:20:09,520 --> 00:20:12,680 Speaker 4: No idea mountain line. Mountain line seems to be the consensus. 318 00:20:12,720 --> 00:20:13,840 Speaker 4: A few of you like Puma. 319 00:20:14,640 --> 00:20:17,360 Speaker 2: I think there's a company named Puma. 320 00:20:17,640 --> 00:20:22,880 Speaker 4: You're exactly right, Phil. That's it for today's round of trivia. 321 00:20:22,920 --> 00:20:24,320 Speaker 4: How much money did we raise? 322 00:20:24,480 --> 00:20:26,440 Speaker 1: They raised two hundred twenty dollars. 323 00:20:28,680 --> 00:20:30,920 Speaker 5: For of the max. 324 00:20:31,280 --> 00:20:33,800 Speaker 4: Well done, kids, Join us next time for more meat 325 00:20:33,800 --> 00:20:37,000 Speaker 4: Eater Kids Trivia the only other game show where conservation 326 00:20:37,240 --> 00:20:40,040 Speaker 4: always wins. 327 00:20:42,480 --> 00:20:45,199 Speaker 1: Thank you so much for listening. We really hope you 328 00:20:45,280 --> 00:20:47,760 Speaker 1: enjoyed the episode. If you want to bone up on 329 00:20:47,800 --> 00:20:50,960 Speaker 1: your outdoor knowledge, before the next episode drops, pick up 330 00:20:51,000 --> 00:20:54,080 Speaker 1: a copy of the book Catch a Crayfish, Count the Stars. 331 00:20:54,440 --> 00:20:57,240 Speaker 1: It's available wherever books are sold, and it's chalk full 332 00:20:57,240 --> 00:21:00,440 Speaker 1: of activities that will turn you into a true outdoor expert. 333 00:21:00,960 --> 00:21:03,720 Speaker 1: Now get outside. Be sure to tune in next week 334 00:21:03,880 --> 00:21:06,600 Speaker 1: for another episode of Me Here. 335 00:21:06,760 --> 00:21:10,440 Speaker 5: This h