Kees Moeliker: How a dead duck changed my life
Kees Moeliker: Como um pato morto mudou a minha vida
Kees Moeliker writes and speaks about natural history, especially birds and remarkable animal behavior, as well as improbable research and science-communication-with-a-laugh. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
o meu trabalho.
Isto deve ser necrofilia.
(Risos)
observar este comportamento.
— (Risos) —
do pénis de um pato,
10 000 espécies de aves
Anas platyrhynchos (Aves: Anatidae)"
uma festa de anos
é algo diferente.
e colegas instigaram-me
necrofilia homossexual
chamada Marc Abrahams,
com o seu artigo do pato:
(Aplausos) —
rir e depois fazem-nas pensar,
Marc Abrahams
do Prémio Ig Nobel,
de Harvard. E essa cerimónia
Prémios Nobel.
recebem prémios.
Charles Paxton,
em 2000 pelo seu artigo,
para com os humanos,
falsificados caros
falsificados baratos.
dos Estados Unidos.
gripe das aves.
a minha vida mudou.
começaram a enviar-me
as suas observações
comportar-se mal neste planeta,
com um peixinho vermelho.
no reino animal.
Hong Kong, em 2004.
de Ethan Allen.
até que vi estes slides.
fazia era voar contra a janela,
este pássaro um par de anos —
para o Dia do Pato Morto.
para as seis da tarde,
em Roterdão,
mil milhões de aves
a um restaurante chinês
seis pratos, de pato.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kees Moeliker - OrnithologistKees Moeliker writes and speaks about natural history, especially birds and remarkable animal behavior, as well as improbable research and science-communication-with-a-laugh.
Why you should listen
In Kees Moeliker's career (he's now curator of the Natural History Museum Rotterdam) he's rediscovered long-lost birds, such as the black-chinned monarch (Monarcha boanensis) on the remote Moluccan island of Boano in 1991. On the tiny West Papuan island of Boo he collected and named a new subspecies of fruit bat (Macroglossus minimus booensis).
Aaaaand he's the guy who observed and published the first scientifically documented case of homosexual necrophilia in ducks. For this, he was awarded the 2003 Ig Nobel biology prize, and that much-coveted award led him to appreciate that curiosity and humour can be powerful tools for scientists and science communicators.
Moeliker later used these tools to tell the world about two other notorious, complicated subjects: the brutally murdered ‘Domino’ sparrow and the feared disappearance of the once-ubiquitous pubic louse. He has pioneered unusual ways to engage international audience — to make people think about remarkable animal behaviour, biodiversity and habitat destruction.
His writings include two books, in Dutch: 'De eendenman' (The Duck Guy, 2009) and 'De bilnaad van de teek' (The Butt Crack of the Tick, 2012).
Each year, on June 5, he organizes Dead Duck Day, an event that commemorates the first known case of homosexual necrophilia in the mallard duck. The event also raises awareness for the tremendous number of bird deaths caused, worldwide, by glass buildings.
Kees Moeliker | Speaker | TED.com