Alex Antonelli on learning from nature's biodiversity to adapt to climate change

Alex Antonelli on learning from nature's biodiversity to adapt to climate change

Author: BBC Radio 4 September 19, 2023 Duration: 28:18

With the world's biodiversity being lost at an alarming rate, Alexandre Antonelli, Director of Science at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, has made it his life's mission to protect it. He is a bio-geographer revealing how changes to the Earth's landscape, such as the formation of mountain ranges and rainforests, leads to the evolution of new species and causes plants, fungi and animals to move around the world.

His work is a masterclass in joined-up thinking, bringing together different fields of research by starting conversations between scientists who would rarely talk to one another. Together, they paint a more holistic picture of how our planet's biodiversity has developed in the hope of informing how we can protect it in the future.

Alex tells presenter Jim Al-Khalili about a life spent in the wild, beginning with his earliest memories of growing up in Brazil cataloguing life in the Atlantic Rainforest. That passion is still with him today. We've only scratched the surface of understanding what lives here on Earth, he says, more than 4,000 new species are found every year. Alex is passionate that we need to speed up the rate at which we document the richness of life, arguing if we don't identify what there is we can't protect it.

Presented by Jim Al-Khalili Produced by Tom Bonnett


Hosted by physicist and author Professor Jim Al-Khalili, The Life Scientific offers a rare and intimate glimpse into the minds shaping our world. Each conversation moves beyond the standard lecture or interview, weaving together personal history with groundbreaking ideas. You’ll hear how childhood curiosity, unexpected setbacks, and moments of sheer luck have steered the careers of some of today's most influential researchers. This BBC Radio 4 podcast treats science not as a remote collection of facts, but as a deeply human endeavor driven by passion, perseverance, and sometimes, serendipity. The discussions delve into the real process of discovery-the late-night frustrations, the collaborative breakthroughs, and the ethical questions that arise from new knowledge. While exploring everything from the smallest particles to the vastness of the cosmos, the core of each episode remains the individual behind the science. Listeners come to understand not just what these scientists know, but who they are and what continues to drive them forward. It’s a series that connects the personal to the universal, making complex fields accessible and profoundly relevant. By focusing on the life as much as the science, this podcast reveals how our future is being built, one question at a time, in labs, field stations, and offices around the globe.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

The Life Scientific
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