- Видео 30
- Просмотров 79 972
Simon Dures
Великобритания
Добавлен 3 сен 2011
Conservation biologist bringing you positive stories of conservation in action. Join me as I tell the stories of the people and the projects working in conservation around the world.
ruclips.net/user/SimonDures
Twitter: SimonDures
Instagram: SimonDures
ruclips.net/user/SimonDures
Twitter: SimonDures
Instagram: SimonDures
How a museum is encouraging local wildlife
Discover how a Scottish museum is encouraging local wildlife to an urban industrial site, seeing fantastic benefits to both local nature and the people working on site.
Since 2020, National Museums Scotland has proactively managed the grounds at the National Museums Collection Centre in Edinburgh, to support urban biodiversity. They've found that simple changes can make a big impact, boosting the amount of food, shelter and breeding habitat for an array of local wildlife.
NMS would also like to thank GP Plantscape (www.gpplantscape.com) for all their help managing the site for the benefit of both wildlife and the community at the museum’s Edinburgh collection centre.
You can download the iR...
Since 2020, National Museums Scotland has proactively managed the grounds at the National Museums Collection Centre in Edinburgh, to support urban biodiversity. They've found that simple changes can make a big impact, boosting the amount of food, shelter and breeding habitat for an array of local wildlife.
NMS would also like to thank GP Plantscape (www.gpplantscape.com) for all their help managing the site for the benefit of both wildlife and the community at the museum’s Edinburgh collection centre.
You can download the iR...
Просмотров: 756
Видео
Is tree planting really that important?
Просмотров 4,6 тыс.4 месяца назад
We visit a tree nursery in the Scottish Highlands to ask if tree planting is really that important for the restoration of our lost biodiversity and to find out how trees are grown for planting and rewilding. If you want to get involved with the Cairngorms Connect look here: www.cairngormsconnect.org.uk/ get-involved/volunteering-opportunities or follow Cairngorms Connect on their socials - @Cai...
Is this the future of Scottish conservation?
Просмотров 6817 месяцев назад
Have you ever wondered what the future is for the conservation of our natural world? Here in Scotland, there may be a plan that is bringing together land managers with all sorts of views, ideas and expertise that could make a huge impact, not just on our environment, but also on how we work together for a common goal. Music from Epidemic Sound - sign up here to help the channel - www.epidemicso...
We are not sleeping - Protecting Africa's Wildlife
Просмотров 3898 месяцев назад
I had the honour of interviewing Bertha Chipanda for International Women's Day. She is a powerful, proud, intelligent woman from Malawi who has dedicated her life to prosecuting wildlife crime in her country. She is an example of the amazing people working in conservation and I hope this interview celebrates her, and women like her. This interview was made possible by Players of Peoples Postcod...
The indigenous protectors saving the amazon!
Просмотров 23311 месяцев назад
Learn how Rainforest Foundation US is helping the indigenous people of the Amazon protect their rainforest. There are more types of plants and animals living in the Amazon rainforest than anywhere else on the planet! So, it is hugely important to all of us to keep the rainforests healthy. To learn more go to kids.rainforestfoundation.org This was a wonderful commission by Rainforest Foundation ...
One man's dream to restore a forest
Просмотров 49 тыс.11 месяцев назад
In 1976 Alan Watson Featherstone made a promise to restore Scotland's Caledonian Forest. On the back of that promise, he founded the hugely successful rewilding charity Trees for Life and is arguably responsible for the rewilding movement in Scotland and beyond. I was fortunate enough to spend a day with Alan in Glen Afric hearing about that feat and the ongoing impact his promise is having. It...
How you can help Scottish wildlife conservation - deadline 14th December!
Просмотров 47911 месяцев назад
Right now there is an incredible opportunity to help influence Scottish Wildlife Conservation. Find out how you can make your voice heard and help guide how Scottish wildlife and biodiversity is managed. Link to the consultation: consult.gov.scot/environment-forestry/tackling-the-nature-emergency/ or email: biodiversityconsultation@gov.scot The Woodland Trust's thoughts on the consultation: www...
How wildlife crime is combatted in Africa
Просмотров 96411 месяцев назад
Hugely dedicated anti-poaching teams work across Africa's protected areas, but how do these teams secure convictions? What happens when an arrest is made? What evidence do they need? How is Africa combatting wildlife crime? See how this is being tackled in the African country of Malawi. TRACE Wildlife Forensics Network helps develop training and capacity building for wildlife law enforcement to...
Why YOU should do no mow may
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.Год назад
Some of the most effective conservation actions are those carried out by people at home and the simple act of not mowing your lawn can have a huge impact! Learn about 'No Mow May' and why it is such a fantastic and simple way to increase biodiversity. For more information have a look at Plantlife’s ‘Guide to Liberating Your Lawn’ - www.plantlife.org.uk/campaigns/your-no-mow-may-lawn-guide/ and ...
Healthy People, Healthy Planet - What is One Health?
Просмотров 674Год назад
For people to be healthy, the planet and the ecosystems that support life must be also healthy. In medicine, this idea is known as One Health. In this film, Anna Meredith, professor of zoological and conservation medicine at the University of Edinburgh, explains what One Health is and why it is so important for the health of people, animals, plants and our entire planet. The film was commission...
How YOU can help CONSERVATION projects
Просмотров 98Год назад
How can you help conservation projects? Conservation needs skills from all sorts of people and there are many ways you can directly help conservation projects around the world. The Key Conservation platform gives individuals actionable steps they can take right now to fill gaps in support and funding for conservation efforts around the world. Individuals can use their skills, funds, and in-pers...
How to plant 100 trees
Просмотров 6862 года назад
How hard is it to plant 100 trees here in the UK? I promised that if I reached 100 subscribers I would plant 100 trees. Here is the short story of me trying to do just that! To everyone who has subscribed to my channel, thank you, this is for you. Raleigh International: www.raleighinternational.org All music from: www.epidemicsound.com/referral/zm8kdf #ConservationOptimism #ActionNotExcuses
What is CoP 15?
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.2 года назад
#CoP15 Ever heard of CoP15, the United Nations Biodiversity Conference. Biodiversity conference? Want to know what the world's governments and the UN are doing to halt global biodiversity loss and how this impacts efforts to tackle climate change? Hear what is so important from members of Edinburgh Conservation Science (ECoS) including from the University of Edinburgh, the National Museum of Sc...
Catching golden eagles - The south of Scotland golden eagle project, part 1
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.3 года назад
Catching golden eagles - The south of Scotland golden eagle project, part 1
Releasing golden eagles - South of Scotland golden eagle project, part 2
Просмотров 6 тыс.3 года назад
Releasing golden eagles - South of Scotland golden eagle project, part 2
Thank YOU, from a conservation scientist
Просмотров 3153 года назад
Thank YOU, from a conservation scientist
Oh What a Wonderful World - Conservation Optimism
Просмотров 1373 года назад
Oh What a Wonderful World - Conservation Optimism
How your COFFEE can help CONSERVATION
Просмотров 1763 года назад
How your COFFEE can help CONSERVATION
Seaweed t-shirts can save the planet!
Просмотров 1893 года назад
Seaweed t-shirts can save the planet!
Combatting the illegal trade in African Lion body parts
Просмотров 4234 года назад
Combatting the illegal trade in African Lion body parts
How to catch a poacher - what is wildlife crime scene investigation?
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.4 года назад
How to catch a poacher - what is wildlife crime scene investigation?
Swimming lions of the Okavango - conservation research
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.4 года назад
Swimming lions of the Okavango - conservation research
Conservation from Beyond the Grave - HALLOWEEN Special
Просмотров 3556 лет назад
Conservation from Beyond the Grave - HALLOWEEN Special
Scottish Golden Eagle Conservation Research - how to check an eagle's health
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.6 лет назад
Scottish Golden Eagle Conservation Research - how to check an eagle's health
Golden eagle conservation fieldwork: Scottish Highlands
Просмотров 5196 лет назад
Golden eagle conservation fieldwork: Scottish Highlands
bless him!
Your twitch channel link is broken 🤔😀🙂
I love you,thankyou! My grandfather was a Watson from Edinbururgh, so Im claiming you as kin.
A true hero of the earth. And an inspiration.
superb.
We h ad a fewscary moments with a bobcat and black bears in New Hampshire USA when we had a house there I am not sure how wolves and lynx can be safely reintroduced, what happens when the first clueless hillwalker gets eaten, it might solve the deer problem but could also solve the overpopulation in the country
Thank you for this interview. Very inspiring.
I love his heart.
Off to a good start imo BUT.. unless you understand the 7 layers of a forest..planting both habitat and edible species for the different seasons, your not gonna get the wildlife diversity return your after. Jmho.
Thank you for this incredible video! Keep it up! StocktonRob
Right on bro
Absolutely fantastic! 💚
A Candle that light's up the Darkness. A Tree Jedi ..<<bows to my Sensei>>
What wonderful work. This is pure joy! Thank you for sharing this treasure.
You are very welcome! I’m glad you enjoyed it!
love it!
Too sentimental for my taste. I’d like to learn more about how big the are is that is restored and if there is plans to expand it etc
Fantastic video
Thank you so much! Glad you enjoyed it!
Fantastic video well done Simon and Ashleigh
Thank you so much! Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video and urgently important. Thank you. I used to hill walk in The Highlands all the time. Thought it was a beautiful and wild landscape. Didn't give the lack of trees a moments thought. Just assumed that was how it was meant to be. But once you know, you can't unknow. Once you see, you can't unsee. The trees cling on in small pockets in inaccessible places, and most of the remaining woodland is 'ghost' woodland. Not everywhere, but mostly, with large swathes of the Highlands completely devoid of trees. Not because they won't grow, but because they can't grow. They're eaten. Until we grasp the nettle and properly replace the effects of the wolf and the lynx Scotland will continue to be mostly barren. And yet what potential we have for carbon capture and a biodiversity explosion.
And the work you are doing at Lettuce is helping change this situation, slowly but steadily!
Great work!
Thank you!
Great work sir!! Appreciated👏
So nice of you
I get all choked up every time he does
Just imagine how hard it was when filming, its hard to keep the camera in focus when you are welling up!
Love to see a woodland named after him this man’s life is the true meaning of life thanks for being there for nature
That would be wonderful!
Awful contamination of the video's sound with background music.
Sorry you didn't like the music, I hope you enjoyed the content
That degraded "tree graveyard" holds unique species. I spy some Drosera sun dew right there. That kinda plant needs low nutrient-high moisture soil.
You do indeed. There is nothing wrong with a bit of low nutrient and high moisture soils and it is these that characterise much of the Caledonian forest soils and why species’ like sun dew are relatively common in these areas. It is the extent and growing nature of the peat hags (which also still support sun dews) that is the worry. Disturbance is wonderful for any ecosystem, so long as it isn’t excessive. Of course knowing what should be considered excessive is the challenge. Some species will always thrive in degraded landscapes, but one or two unique species doesn’t generally make for a healthy ecosystem. I have long considered making a film about the intermediate disturbance hypothesis, which identifies this very fact. The geek in me claims this as my favourite ecological hypothesis 🤓
Need to call this out, the crofters where not given other jobs on the estates during the Highlands clearance, they were then contracted as indentured servants, (slaves) under contract to work on plantations in the new world, like Jamaica.. Whereas you would work your fare off as the kindly lord or lady would pay your fare to the new world and would have the opportunity to buy your way out of your contract through hard work. I suggest you plant a tree for every poor tenant farmer who was thrown off their land. And your looking for volunteers, more slaves.
This was certainly a particularly crap period of Scottish history. My very basic understanding of the clearances was that the first phase of the clearances involved the clan chiefs, who had then been made dukes, breaking up the traditional townships and moving tenants to smaller Croft’s as well as to other industries like kelp and fishing. I think that is what David was referring to but didn’t want to go into details because of how complex and understandably emotive the topic is (I apologise if I have this wrong, history is not my expertise). I would happily look to plant a tree for all those displaced, it would be a wonderful memorial to those people who suffered from the clearances. I would also suggest that volunteers are exceedingly willing to give their time, to suggest a comparison with indentured servitude is a disservice to those people who suffered from the ‘assisted emigration’ of the 18 hundreds.
@@SimonDures I'm sure the carbon credits you'll receive would help pay for your enterprise.
Since the beginning of this project in the southern Scotland area how many birds have been released and does anyone know how they are doing and if they have gone on to breed and if they have settled in the south?
33 relocated to date. The translocated individuals are still young (the oldest only 5) and have only just begun to reach the age which they start breeding, so we are still waiting. However, a few of them have started pairing up and building nests and some even have laid eggs, but no chicks yet from the trans located birds. For more news keep an eye on the blog on the project website - www.goldeneaglessouthofscotland.co.uk
@@SimonDures wonderful thank you so much
I'm glad this video comes out in favour of 'deliberately' planting trees, rather than just leaving land fallow to regenerate on its own. Often, land is just so depleted, so bare and open, those creatures that do all the planting avoid this sort of terrain for fear of exposure to predators. I only have a little bit of land here in Scotland (or a large-ish garden by English standards. Probably about 2.5 acres altogether (a sliver of it already established woodland with a stream as its border. The rest was originally grass - where grass could grow, but there was a lot of exposed rock, centuries of intensive sheep farming having gnawed everything down. So, I 'could not' plant trees to begin with (even though I had moved here with potted trees ready to go). The soil was too shallow, and deer had replaced the sheep, keeping that grass low. I waited for tree seeds to start popping up in that grass, yet nothing happened, even though we had a flourishing red squirrel pipulation at the time, plus mice and types of bird that will bury seed stashes. Several years passed, as I let the grass grow unmowed, to slowly build soil levels, adding only additional leaves from my bit of woodland, kitchen scraps, and the odd finished potted herb. But not one tree seed grew on that land. It took 'me' to start that work, as I planted a hedge to bridge my neighbour's woodland with the riparian stream. Once that hedge started to grow, animals began using it as a highway. Indeed, I was quite surprised just how much life suddenly started to use it one summer - wandering pheasants, small birds, burrowing animals, hedgehogs, foxes and badgers. It was clear they needed cover, and once they started to use this part of the garden - Hazel and Oak seedlings started to appear here and there. I added Alder, Birch, Rowan and Beech, and the first two are now self seeding. The more I plant - the more Nature matches my efforts. I may plant a 100 trees one Autumn, and not only does she add a few of her own - I'll discover a few new wild flowers, orbird, or fungi. After 21 years, this past year has been unmatched with the number of new species Nature has introduced. 7 new wild flowers, lizards, Goldcrests, and this weird blue and copper fly (or perhaps a bee. I have been unable to identify it). So all this prives to me that helping Nature by planting a range of trees that we find easier to grow from seed or cuttings does not limit that land's capability of recovery. From out of nowhere, it seems, wildlife will bring in a stock of plants to add a much greater variety to whatever you put into the ground. I wish I could help out at that nursery, but if there's anything that does give me stress - it's travelling. I will have to make do with my piece of garden (which isn't the only project I have in mind. A couple of miles walk away, there is a bit of abandoned ground, prone to flooding now, but used for cattle not so long ago. I think the introduction of a few appropriate species from the surrounding neighbourhood will help kickstart this area into action. Anyway, always good to see a nice, young channel on a subject I like, so pressed like and subscribed. Good luck!
What a great story and a perfect example of how we need actions such as yours to help kickstart nature into recovery. We can't expect trees to grow when the seed source simply doesn't exist anymore. Well done with what you have done, it sounds wonderful!
You mentioned about reconnecting the forest… I think that all the remaining/undeveloped riparian areas (about 50 meters on either side of natural rivers) should be declared protected all around the world. The land should then be rewilded… providing a space for native trees and wildlife. It will then act as a wildlife corridor.
That would be an incredible achievement and result in huge biodiversity benefit across the world's landscapes. What a wonderful vision!
yes, at the very least. in wildlife terms, 50 meters is almost nothing. especially if humans have access which they will.
Not unless done properly
A great example of what a human should be.
#PLANTMORETREES #INVESTinBIODiversity "Only when the last tree has been cut down, the last fish been caught, and the last stream poisoned, will we realize we cannot eat money." Cree Indian Prophecy
What a legend. Alan is my hero
Mine too!
Simon Dures is a dignified follower of Richard St Barbe Baker, the man of the trees !!! Hope he can contemplate his trees still for another 50 years...
I love this man
Nicely done, I used to live in the UK and planted many hundreds of oaks willows birch alder etc etc I have no idea how many but could be well on the way to 1000. that was my relaxation place, planting trees, I now live in Canada and spend a lot of my time clearing deadfall off of trails etc . and planting trees and doing what i can, it is one of the most relaxing things in the world planting trees. keep up the good work hats off to you guys.
Well done and great to hear. There is little that is as satisfying as planting a tree and getting to watch it grow and mature, knowing it will long outlive us!
@@SimonDures Thats for sure, the oaks i have planted could live to be 600 years old, the yews much older. no one will care who planted them but they will enjoy sitting in their shade thats for sure.
Just up the road from me. I'll need to go have a look. Well done, keep ep up the great work🙏🏻
Please do! They always need keen volunteers and they are a lovely bunch!
A beautiful soul, well done Alan
There’s no climate change, they are geo engineering it and have been since all major weather disasters
Misguided in my view and nothing to be proud of. Is this project about making ppl feel good and ticking boxes in terms of number of trees planted? How will a forest be diverse or adaptable to climate change if full of the wrong type of tree or thousands of clones?
Why misguided? What makes you think they are using the wrong type of tree? As David explained, it is only native trees and stock from the Cairngorms that are used and the whole premise is to avoid clones and increase the diversity of those trees that have declined due to past management practices. This is done by propagating trees native to and collected from the region, which are currently at such low density due to a huge reduction in tree cover that they cannot reproduce sexually. This low density is leading to a lack of diversity both within and between species. By utilising a seed stand, the nursery facilitates sexual reproduction, avoiding clonal swamping, and increasing genetic diversity. Currently, the forests have very little resilience to climate change, diseases or other stochastic events because of low genetic diversity, so the nursery aims to increase the genetic resilience and the populations of those tree species that will not recover without human intervention (or at least not in a reasonable time period).
@@SimonDures but those trees they are taking stock from as you explain in your video have no future, they are not regenerating on their own as there are no predators to keep the herbivores in check. The top level predators as it turns out are key stone species that make the forest as you want it possible. To be fair this is not a criticism aimed solely at you instead it's a recurring problem faced by many forests and ecosystems around the world. Indeed other videos have talked about the thorny issue of bringing back bears, wolves, beaver etc to Scottish highlands..
Great Video
Thanks!
Did he use native trees?
Yes, all the trees are not only native to Scotland but come from the local area. In fact, where possible the project focusses on regeneration from the current seed source
Great Video, thank you!
Thank you!
#PLANTMORETREES #INVESTinBIODiversity "Only when the last tree has been cut down, the last fish been caught, and the last stream poisoned, will we realize we cannot eat money." Cree Indian Prophecy
Way to go, keep it up people!
What do you do to get out there and feel a sense of achievement?
I look after Catherine's bird boxes in Luncarty. Not much but it helps🙏🏻
That is wonderful! It is the small things that make a big difference. Well done!
You are an amazing inspiration and an amazing human being thank you! 💚🍀
Yes!
What a great work he has done!!
No words - just HUGE respect!
What a wonderful legacy. Thank you.