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Our researchers regularly produce blog pieces, news and views articles and you can find their publications on our research outputs page.

News

8 July 2025

A team including LCAB researchers Lindsey Gillson, Jon Pitchford, Brennen Fagan, Inês Martins, and Chris Lyon co-hosted a workshop in June, paving the way for a more inclusive and equitable way of knowledge sharing and co-production.

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4 July 2025

Hanna Pettersson has been awarded the Society for Conservation Biology (SCB) Europe Early Career Conservation Award 2025.

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3 July 2025

PhD student Charlie Le Marquand reflects on her three month POST Fellowship at the Houses of Parliament.

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14 June 2025

A leading environmental scientist has been recognised in the King’s Birthday Honours, alongside a former Academic Registrar from the University of York.

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9 June 2025

As part of the York Festival of Ideas, Pen Holland and LCAB director Lindsey Gillson arranged a special edition of their interdisciplinary series Ecospaces.

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6 June 2025

LCAB had the honour of hosting a panel discussion on the benefits of nature and biodiversity to human wellbeing.

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30 May 2025

Researchers have updated the largest biodiversity time-series database on the planet to include data from over half a million locations worldwide.

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20 May 2025

Two University of York scientists have been elected Fellows of the Royal Society in recognition of their achievements in the fields of ecology and mathematical virology.

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28 April 2025

A new initiative aims to bring together University of York researchers with local communities to create shared visions of their future landscapes.

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24 February 2025

Researchers have suggested appointing practitioners or stewards to bring together local knowledge and conservation practices to inform policies on coexistence with large carnivores such as wolves, bears and lynx.

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3 February 2025

A group of researchers shut in a room for the day trying to answer one question with only their wits and ingenuity, and of course a tonne of big data. What could go wrong? Jonny Gordon, Brennen Fagan and Jack Hatfield discuss.

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27 January 2025

The need for information on long-term change throughout the Holocene provides an interface for sustainability science and palaeoecology.

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17 January 2025

LCAB PhD student Andrew Gibson shares his experience of the American Geophysical Union annual conference

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2 January 2025

Professor Lindsay Stringer is the new Associate Director of the Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity. Here we talk about her area of work and what drew her to the Centre.

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5 December 2024

Postdoctoral Researcher Brennen Fagan discusses how mathematics might help us understand the Lake District.

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2 December 2024

On a crisp autumn afternoon, Charlie Le Marquand peered nervously through the windows of Central Hall and watched as a cluster of 12 and 13 year olds approached the building. This was to be her first go at secondary school outreach.

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21 November 2024

Molly Bown visits a York primary school to talk about the topic of her PhD research.

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24 October 2024

Molly Brown shares her highlights of coordinating a project which brought together academics, NGO practitioners and government officials.

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15 October 2024

Three LCAB researchers enjoyed success at this year's Botanical University Challenge, facing down Reading and Kew Gardens but were ultimately bested by Cambridge.

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9 October 2024

It was a busy summer for LCAB. Staff and students represented the centre at a number of national and international events.

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4 October 2024

Dr Inês Martins, of York’s Department of Biology, has been awarded a prestigious University Research Fellowship (URF) from the Royal Society.

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17 July 2024

Humans have been an important driver of vegetation change over thousands of years, and, in some places, had positive impacts on biodiversity, according to a new study.

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12 July 2024

A successful Dragons' Den Style Pitching Session was held in The Guildhall Council Chamber, the culmination of YESI's Interdisciplinary Research Training Programme, "Building interdisciplinary research culture to tackle environmental sustainability challenges: From novice to ninja"

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2 July 2024

A growing number of people across Europe are facing the challenge of living with large carnivores. Hanna Pettersson explores its socio-economic implications through a case study in Northern Sweden.

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1 July 2024

Being nursed by a single parent could be an evolutionary strategy to curb the spread of harmful microbes in mammals, according to a novel theory developed by mathematicians.

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25 June 2024

LCAB Director Lindsey Gillson was part of a group of researchers who have taken an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the complexities of Karoo landscapes.

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20 June 2024

Professor Robert Costanza has been awarded the prestigious Blue Planet Prize for his work studying the economic importance of intact natural ecosystems on society.

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11 June 2024

Julia Schauerman and Theo Tomking recently exhibited their final piece of work as part of the LCAB Artist in Residence scheme.

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29 May 2024

Hong Jiang discusses the future view of protected area and other effective area-based conservation measures expansion, and the difficulty of achieving these goals.

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15 May 2024

We were delighted to welcome world renowned researcher Erle Ellis to LCAB to share his work with us.

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7 May 2024

Climate change and land-use change are threatening biodiversity globally.

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1 May 2024

Professor Lindsey Gillson is the new Director of the Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity. Here we talk with her about balancing the good and bad of human impact on planet Earth.

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26 April 2024

Nature conservation is successful in halting and reversing biodiversity loss, according to the findings of a major new study co-authored by a University of York academic.

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26 April 2024

By mid-century climate change is set to become the primary cause of biodiversity loss, but there is still time to reduce the impact on global ecosystems and species, scientists say.

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23 April 2024

Researchers have shown that an Amazonian butterfly is a hybrid species, formed by two other species breeding together almost 200,000 years ago.

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8 April 2024

The boreal forest, covering much of Canada and Alaska, and the treeless shrublands to the north of the forest region, may be among the worst impacted by climate change over the next 500 years, according to a new study.

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4 April 2024

As researchers, we spend a lot of time communicating our work. Why is it important? What did we do? What have we learnt? Where could we take this next?

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21 March 2024

Bakeries in Nigeria which use traditional open ovens fuelled by hardwood cut from local forests are contributing to rapid deforestation and climate change, according to a study from academics working in Nigeria and from the University of York and UCL.

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14 March 2024

Molly Brown draws on sources from across the UK, Africa and Asia to highlight the role that demand has played in forming our values towards ivory and elephants.

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6 March 2024

PhD student Molly Brown shares her takeaways from the ‘Introduction to News Media’ session run by the Science Media Centre.

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28 February 2024

Researchers have shown that inedible species of butterfly, that mimic each other's colour patterns, have also evolved similar flight behaviours to warn predators and avoid being eaten.

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31 January 2024

PhD student Chantal Berry writes about her experiences at the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival and how they have inspired her current research.

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29 January 2024

Postdoctoral Research Associate Jack Hatfield discusses Ecology and biodiversity change, including the turnover of species and the losses and gains that change generates.

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17 January 2024

PhD student Marco Franzoi gives his thoughts on biodiversity and the risks that it can be subjected to.

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8 January 2024

Postdoctoral Researcher Brennen Fagan considers the implications of the creature collecting media.

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5 December 2023

Over the past year myself and Julia Schauerman have been working on an LCAB artist residency project called Growing Stories for Different Climates. As our composition now comes toward its end, I would like to take this opportunity to reflect on the process of collaboration and the ways our project has brought arts and sciences together.

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3 November 2023

The Interdisciplinary Conservation Network (ICN) aims to provide opportunities for Early Career Researchers to develop transferable skills and leadership; come together to think through cross-cutting and topical issues; and develop collaborative research with other ECRs from around the world.

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25 October 2023

PhD student Andrew Gibson discusses a recent LCAB research forum led by Dr Felicia Liu, a lecturer in sustainability in the Department of Environment and Geography at the University of York.

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13 October 2023

Postdoctoral research associate, Tadhg Carroll discusses the utility and possible implications of viewing recent biodiversity change, as adaptation to shifting environments.

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3 October 2023

In July, LCAB’s Katie Noble and I climbed into some metal and carbon fibre tubes and travelled through the sky and the future to The Land Down Under. Apparently, the hippie trail is rewilded, and gassy, fried-out Kombis are harder to come by, so aeroplanes it was.

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25 September 2023

Everyone at LCAB would like to offer their congratulations to Dr Inês Martins, who has recently had a paper published in Science!

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22 September 2023

Postdoctoral researcher, Hanna Pettersson, looks back on her first year with the Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity and discusses the contemporary topic of Rewilding.

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11 September 2023

Postdoctoral Research Associate Jamie Carr describes why he feels greater attention should be given to the non-environmental enabling conditions that can facilitate better conservation outcomes.

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22 August 2023

Postdoctoral research associate Dr Tabitha Kabora reports on the International Congress for Conservation Biology, held in Kigali, Rwanda 23-27 July 2023 by the Society for Conservation Biology.

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10 August 2023

Postdoctoral Researcher Brennen Fagan discusses debates centred on biodiversity.

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8 August 2023

Introduced species are often a complex and contentious issue. Jack Hatfield discusses the case of stoats on the Orkney Islands.

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11 July 2023

Chris Thomas and Emma Marris in conversation as part of the York Festival of Ideas.

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30 June 2023

In LCAB last month we were joined by Professor Harriet Ritvo an Arthur J Connel Professor of history at MIT. In a series of group discussions and seminars, we chatted about what biodiversity can do for the arts (a subversion of the common ‘what can the arts do for the sciences?’ question), ‘compensating for loss’ (in terms of extinctions) and how to break down interdisciplinary boundaries.

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19 June 2023

PhD student Theo Tomking and Artist in Residence Julia Schauerman reflect on the process of collaboration throughout their time working together on the Artist Residencies programme.

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15 June 2023

PhD student Hien Luong reflects on how he became a researcher at the University of York and how he aims to bring together the disparate worlds of nature conservation and money from the Financial Markets.

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25 May 2023

As part of the LCAB Artists Residency programme, PhD student Theo Tomking and artist Julia Schauerman have been developing 'Growing Stories for Different Climates.' This will be an acousmatic story composition; a type of storytelling that uses recorded spoken word set within composed sound scenes which evoke specific places and time periods.

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12 May 2023

In May 2023 LCAB Fellow Dr Jonathan Cane and his research collaborator Dr Andre Prado Fernandes visited Manaus and the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project Area of Relevant Ecological Interest (DBFFP) in Brazil.

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10 May 2023

Post doctoral researcher, Michael Stratigos, discusses how protected areas are now set to become a key tool in the fight against declines in Biodiversity. Following the Montreal-Kunming COP15 which has seen many national governments pledge to protect 30% of land and sea for the protection of nature by 2030 (the 30 by 30 target), protected areas will see rapid expansion and many other existing designations will be adapted to ensure greater protection of biodiversity.

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2 May 2023

In early April 2023, PhD student Nikki Paterson attended an intensive political ecology spring school at Wageningen University in the Netherlands. Led by Professor Bram Büscher and Dr Robert Fletcher, and hosted by the School of Social Sciences, the week was centred around the theme 'The natures of life and death: Political ecologies of collapse, transformation and revival'.

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3 March 2023

Jack Hatfield discusses to what extent we can intentionally shape ecosystems and invites your thoughts on the matter.

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28 February 2023

Artist in Residence Laura Denning and PhD candidate Chantal Berry are roughly halfway through their collaboration as part of LCAB's artists residencies programme. Laura looks forward to plans for the coming months as their research and ideas begin to crystallise.

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17 February 2023

PhD student Molly Brown discusses how she is interested in the effectiveness of the approaches undertaken to curb consumer demand for ivory, commonly referred to as demand reduction, and assesses the potential for actual behavioural change across the landscape of demand reduction approaches.

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8 February 2023

Postdoctoral Researcher Brennen Fagan reflects on loss in research, and how some researchers move forward.

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24 January 2023

PhD student Theo Tomking shares the focus of his research which looks at representations of soils in tropics in the twentieth century.

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13 January 2023

PhD student Chantal Berry recently visited the Nottinghamshire Archives, to ascertain the sources available for her research into rural soundscapes of early modern England, a broad title for her thesis. Here is Chantal’s account of her visit.

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23 December 2022

Professor Chris Thomas has reproduced the following article from the conference booklet of a New Networks for Nature meeting. He reflects on being both a scientist and a naturalist and on how we need to change our food production system to sustain our increasing human population.

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19 December 2022

In the new research paper published in People and Nature, led by post doctoral research associate Michael Stratigos, an important archaeological dataset, Historic Landscape Characterisation, has been brought to bear on how protected areas are biased not only for certain types of physical landscapes and habitats, but also to certain types of historic cultural landscapes.

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6 December 2022

PhD student Tyler Gaines discusses how countries, governments, and consumer groups are increasingly aware of the potential environmental consequences driven by their consumption behaviour.

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16 November 2022

What is natural is beautiful. This belief underpins the United Kingdom's policy on National Parks, with National Parks explicitly committed to preserving and enhancing the UK's 'natural beauty'. But what is 'natural'? And what is 'beautiful'?, PhD student Jonathan Gordon asks.

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9 November 2022

PhD student Megan Tarrant recently returned from the 2022 Earth Systems Governance Conference in Toronto. In this article she considers the topic of “transformation” and how it links to justice, which featured heavily in the conference proceedings.

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4 November 2022

Postdoctoral research associate Tabitha Kabora reflects on the UN Biodiversity Conference COP15, the Global Biodiversity Framework and African development and conservation challenges.

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27 October 2022

PhD student Chantal Berry has been collaborating with artist Laura Denning, as part of LCAB’s artists residencies programme. She reflects on the progress of the project so far.

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21 October 2022

Over the past few months, Molly Brown and May Sumbwanyambe have collaboratively worked towards writing a BBC Radio 4 drama as part of the LCAB Artist Residency program. The play uses a Zambian father and daughter’s disillusioned relationship to delve into the complex debate around ivory.

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10 October 2022

Jack Hatfield discusses his own work and other recent developments regarding European mammals.

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30 September 2022

As part of LCAB’s artist residencies, electoacoustic composer Julia Schauerman is collaborating with PhD student Theo Tomking. They reflect on the project so far.

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15 September 2022

Call for Papers for a hybrid (online and in-person) symposium at LCAB, 14-16 December 2022, which will bring together scholars and creative practitioners to consider the intersections of art and science that have been aroused by the prospect of species revival.

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14 September 2022

Theo Tomking shares how guano in the Seychelles enriches our understanding of the ecological and social tensions in historical efforts at modifying soils.

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2 September 2022

Sarah Bezan considers the cross-dissemination of artistic and scientific practices and their bearing upon one another.

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12 August 2022

The in vitro production of real meat from animal cells, known as ‘cultured meat’ (CM), makes it possible to make meat without slaughtering animals. Katie Noble explores this emerging industry.

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1 August 2022

LCAB supported PhD student, Shuyu Deng recently attended the 58th annual meeting of the Association of Tropical Biology and Conservation (ATBC) in Cartagena, Colombia. She writes about her experience.

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20 July 2022

In early nineteenth century Scotland a wave of popular interest in trees swept the nation. Harrie Neal considers the implications.

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19 July 2022

Special events exploring research, ecological activism and museum archives 22-23 July 2022

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7 July 2022

LCAB PhD student Molly Brown considers the complexity of African elephant conservation which is dominated by the ivory trade ban debate in the mainstream understanding of elephant conservation.

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30 June 2022

Postdoctoral Researcher Brennen Fagan considers a recent piece on the evolution of cooperation and notes its relationship to management problems.

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27 June 2022

LCAB announces its first ever artist residency scheme, appointing artists to interpret and communicate the Centre's research through a range of unique collaborations.

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10 June 2022

Earth's population has grown from 3 - 8 billion people over the last 70 years, a shift that has led to a significant increase in global consumption, a more urban population, extensive landscape conversion and a rapidly changing climate.

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26 May 2022

Postdoctoral research associate Sarah Bezan delves into an imaginative space of future revived species.

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10 May 2022

Postdoctoral research associate Michael Stratigos considers Archaeology’s role in wetland environment restoration.

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26 April 2022

Postdoctoral research associate Tabitha Kabora reflects on how biodiversity research and collaboration at all levels is necessary to ensure a more resilient future.

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25 April 2022

Many of the UK’s protected areas are not delivering for nature and are in poor ecological condition, a new report has found.

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5 April 2022

LCAB associated PhD student, Tiffany Ki, recently attended the Student Conference for Conservation Science (SCCS). Here she talks about the experience and some of her previous work.

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29 March 2022

Biodiversity change is complex. As we amass more and more data and aim to make our explanations and predictions global, Jack Hatfield and Tadhg Carroll ask, are we losing sight of these complex details?

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3 March 2022

University of York academics have contributed to a major report which warns that human-induced climate change is causing dangerous disruption around the world and the narrow window left to secure a liveable future for all is closing.

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24 February 2022

LCAB PhD student Chantal Berry suggests that non-visual forms of communication has great potential in conveying the complexities of biodiversity change

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7 February 2022

Tyler Gaines advocates a systems thinking approach to complex problems.

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24 January 2022

PhD Student Megan Tarrant looks at what the upcoming Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework means for human rights in conservation.

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7 January 2022

Theo Tomking considers issues concerning the role of local knowledge and the opportunities new technologies present for agriculture in discussions of how we can produce food for a ‘better’ Anthropocene.

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14 December 2021

PhD student Katie Noble considers the environmentally sustainable alternatives to Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations.

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30 November 2021

Postdoctoral researcher Tabitha Kabora briefly outlines why understanding historical land use can provide important insights on contemporary Anthropocene biodiversity patterns and facilitate conservation efforts.

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25 November 2021

Tree planting might seem like an easy answer to UK net zero efforts. But while the carbon capturing ability of trees is not in doubt, in this blog, Dr Alison Dyke argues that trees offer so much more to urban communities than photosynthesis.

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23 November 2021

Postdoctoral researcher Harrie Neal considers the need to think about the history of human relations to land in debates about non-native species.

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16 November 2021

Okay, they’re not exactly Dragons, but dragonflies and damselflies are still pretty cool. Tadhg Carroll takes a look at species which are thriving in the Anthropocene.

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10 November 2021

The global response to adapting to climate change is fragmented and incremental, undertaken by individuals rather than a comprehensive and coherent effort by communities and institutions, a new study has revealed.

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27 October 2021

Postdoctoral Researcher Brennen Fagan compares and contrasts different approaches to the problem that history happens only once.

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4 October 2021

Parts of the Earth will be uninhabitable by 2500 if the current level of effort to address the climate emergency is maintained, a new study predicts.

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29 September 2021

Postdoctoral researchers Anna Woodhead and Michael Stratigos take us through a thought experiment using archeological data to explore changing ecosystem services through time.

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7 September 2021

The Prime Minister has pledged to protect 30 per cent of land to support the recovery of nature, but a new study finds that much of the new land that has been allocated to meet this aspiration is not in the highest priority areas for biodiversity conservation.

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1 September 2021

Jack Hatfield discusses why the way we quantify change in species communities is important.

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26 August 2021

Scientists studying tropical forests in Africa’s mountains were surprised to uncover how much carbon they store, and how fast some of these forests are being cleared.

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16 August 2021

Postdoctoral research associate Tabitha Kabora reflects on the upcoming COP26, the importance of international cooperation and coordination in conservation efforts and how archaeology is integral in building resilient futures.

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3 August 2021

For the last year, Postdoctoral Research Associate Caroline Ward has been working on a project exploring the barriers to accessing greenspaces. Here she summarises why the topic is important.

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19 July 2021

Michael Stratigos illustrates how Archaeology provides an important perspective in addressing what rewilding actually means and how it could be implemented.

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6 July 2021

PhD student Jonny Gordon considers the part pollen plays in providing ecologists with a record of past plant communities.

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21 June 2021

PhD student Alex Payne looks at how the geological record has a fundamental role to play in comprehending the modern world.

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8 June 2021

Postdoctoral Research Associate Brennen Fagan looks at the subject of speciation and how different groups have tried to tackle it.

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26 May 2021

Postdoctoral Research Associate Anna Woodhead looks at whether coral reef fishers have perceived changes in the benefits associated with coral reefs.

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11 May 2021

UK landowners and conservationists welcome wider-spread use of Gene Conservation Units (GCUs) to help protect some of the rarest plants and insects, research at the University of York has shown.

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10 May 2021

Postdoctoral Research Associate Tadhg Carroll discusses two popular science books that help unpick data driven claims, and shows why they're useful for getting a handle on LCAB’s field of research.

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20 April 2021

Postdoctoral Research Associate Michael Stratigos considers the importance of knowing where to plant trees versus where to reinstate and promote the development of bogs.

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4 February 2021

Pete Yeo, reconciliation ecologist and nature mentor, explores Britain's ecology through the lens of William Blake's poem 'And did those feet in ancient times'

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13 November 2020

Dr Sarah Bezan, LCAB postdoctoral researcher, explores how the category of “endling taxidermy” has emerged in the wake of the sixth mass extinction.

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10 November 2020

The Coronavirus pandemic has had a disproportionate impact on the North of England – leading to more deaths and greater social and economic hardship than any other region in England, according to a new report.

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29 October 2020

The Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity (LCAB) is delighted to announce that we've moved into a newly refurbished space in the Berrick Saul building on Campus West at the University of York.

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6 October 2020

A new study, published by the European Forest Institute, calls for collective action to put nature at the heart of the economy and set the world on a sustainable path.

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4 October 2020

Some of Europe’s native butterflies may have to be moved to colder climes if they are to survive global warming, a new study suggests.

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1 October 2020

COVID-19 is a horrible global crisis. Yet, like previous horrible global crises, including WWI and WWII, it also presents an opportunity and an obligation to rebuild our global society to adapt to changing conditions.

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27 August 2020

The Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity (LCAB) is funding a new research project aiming to explore the drivers behind inequalities in accessing greenspaces in Leeds.

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20 July 2020

A couple of our researchers give their points of view on the planned release of a small herd of wild bison in Kent, as part of a £1m project to reintroduce the animals and help secure the future of an endangered species.

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3 July 2020

Professor Robert Costanza and Dr Ida Kubiszewski talk Ecological Economics and how it can help create a prosperous, just, equitable and sustainable future.

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25 June 2020

Conservation management around the margins of agriculture fail to protect butterfly species at greatest risk from the intensification of farming, a new study says.

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25 June 2020

Forest conservation areas in oil palm plantations play a vital role in storing carbon and boosting rainforest biodiversity, a new study on palm oil agriculture in Borneo has revealed.

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26 May 2020

Professor Kate Pickett explores the local biodiversity of Askham Bog Nature Reserve.

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1 April 2020

Local community involvement is vital in efforts to raise water levels to help restore Indonesia’s tropical peatlands, a new study has found.

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1 April 2020

An international team of researchers, including academics from the University of York, are working to help identify priority forest areas for protection on Borneo.

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12 February 2020

Inês Martins has been awarded a prestigious Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) Individual Fellowship.

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16 December 2019

Non-native plants are providing new homes for Britain’s insects - some of which are rare on native plants, a new study has found.

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19 November 2019

Professor Chris Thomas, Director for the Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity, has been named as a Highly Cited ‘Cross-Field’ Researcher.

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11 November 2019

Researchers who set out to test the widespread theory that the UK is experiencing an alarming plunge in insect numbers have found no evidence for ‘Insect Armageddon’.

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11 November 2019

Professor Robert (Bob) Costanza has been elected a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia, for his work related to public policy.

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24 October 2019

Scientists have discovered why climate change may be contributing to the decline of some British butterflies and moths, such as Silver-studded Blue and High Brown Fritillary butterflies.

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21 October 2019

Many insects moving north in response to climate change find they have nowhere to go in Britain’s intensively managed landscapes, according to new research.

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10 October 2019

Researchers have discovered the first evidence of tropical insects shrinking in size in their bid to survive rising temperatures.

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20 August 2019

Connected areas of high-quality forest running through oil palm plantations could help support increased levels of biodiversity, new research suggests.

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15 August 2019

Faster rates of climate change could be increasing the diversity of plant species in many places, according to research from the University of York.

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25 June 2019

A new report suggests that in addition to producing clean energy, solar farms could offer a vital boost to Britain’s rare species.

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11 January 2019

The Leverhulme Trust Board has announced it will fund up to £10 million over the next 10 years to establish a new centre for research on biodiversity change at the University of York.