EcoDoc Podcast

Professor Simon Potts discusses biodiversity in agricultural crops and how farming can benefit nature

May 24, 2021 Dr Will Liddell Season 1 Episode 5
Professor Simon Potts discusses biodiversity in agricultural crops and how farming can benefit nature
EcoDoc Podcast
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EcoDoc Podcast
Professor Simon Potts discusses biodiversity in agricultural crops and how farming can benefit nature
May 24, 2021 Season 1 Episode 5
Dr Will Liddell

Dr Will Liddell talks Prof Simon Potts of Reading University about his career in agroecology. Many of our food crops are crucially dependent on ecosystems services provided by insects and plants we call weeds. As the pressure to increase the yield and quality of crops over recent years has ramped up, so has the destruction of natural habitat in agricultural landscapes and the use of agrochemicals. However, the success of farming depends on those elements of nature which may have previously been regarded as a nuisance. Our better understanding of the importance of complex interactions is driving a move to ecological intensification, in which natural processes are valued rather than surpressed. 
  Sound engineering by Rob Wynne-Griffiths.  

Show Notes

Dr Will Liddell talks Prof Simon Potts of Reading University about his career in agroecology. Many of our food crops are crucially dependent on ecosystems services provided by insects and plants we call weeds. As the pressure to increase the yield and quality of crops over recent years has ramped up, so has the destruction of natural habitat in agricultural landscapes and the use of agrochemicals. However, the success of farming depends on those elements of nature which may have previously been regarded as a nuisance. Our better understanding of the importance of complex interactions is driving a move to ecological intensification, in which natural processes are valued rather than surpressed. 
  Sound engineering by Rob Wynne-Griffiths.