Ash: a Silent Extinction in the Woods | Wytham Woods

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024
  • What do you do when the nature that surrounds you is inevitably, and slowly, dying? If you’re a researcher at Wytham Woods, you respond with devastation and practicality in equal measure. A ‘silent pandemic’, as described by Professor Yadvinder Malhi, ash dieback (hymenoscyphus fraxineus) has infected canopies of ash trees, not only in Wytham Woods, but across Western Europe since 2012. Cecilia Dahlsjö’s research is facing the loss head on - by running experiments which ask what the impact of this could look like in the immediate future, and the next decade and beyond. The dappled light and the soft leaves of these gentle giants are still savoured by the team at Wytham, even while science acknowledges their fate.
    Video made by Angel Sharp Media www.angelsharp....
    More from the Laboratory with Leaves video series: www.wythamwoods...

Комментарии • 2

  • @anemone104
    @anemone104 10 месяцев назад

    Question: How are you killing the ash in your 'no ash' plots? If you are using herbicide, how are you controlling for possible 'bleed-over' of toxic effects into ground flora and soil organisms?

  • @jimjoelliejack
    @jimjoelliejack 10 месяцев назад +1

    Zebra finches in uk woodlands? Or is this an Australian woodland? If your going to make a scientific film make it factual