Tracking biodiversity gain and loss and their consequences

UCL is using new genomic and monitoring/artificial intelligence approaches which make recording previously cryptic taxa and biomes much easier.

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Professor Alex Pigot explains the impacts of climate change on biodiversity.

Explore our biodiversity research

Warming climate and agriculture halve insect populations in some areas
Aphid on purple flower

Warming climate and agriculture halve insect populations in some areas

Climate change and intensive agricultural land use have already been responsible for a 49% reduction in the number of insects in the most impacted parts of the world, finds study by UCL researchers.

Research led by Dr Alex Pigot selected by The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
death valley landscape

Research led by Dr Alex Pigot selected by The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

Research led by Alex Pigot in CBER quantifying risks to biodiversity from climate change was selected by The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) as one of the key impact metrics.

Analysis: A new AI tool to help monitor coral reef health
Fish swimming above coral reef

Analysis: A new AI tool to help monitor coral reef health

UCL PhD candidate Ben Williams writes with a colleague about why they built SurfPerch, an AI led system to make it faster and easier for marine scientists to answer ecological questions.

Biodiversity indicators to inform international conservation policy
mountain hare

Biodiversity indicators to inform international conservation policy

The IUCN Red List, which is based on criteria developed by researchers at UCL and the Institute of Zoology, has become a key information source for monitoring the status of global biodiversity.

Understanding disease spill-over from wildlife to improve public health
giraffe

Understanding disease spill-over from wildlife to improve public health

UCL and Institute of Zoology researchers have identified what drives transfer of diseases from wildlife to people, predicting emerging disease hotspots and informing disease management globally.

Analysis: Invasive species threaten most protected areas across the world - new study
Squirrel on tree in the evening

Analysis: Invasive species threaten most protected areas across the world - new study

Professor Tim Blackburn (UCL Biosciences) and the Chinese Academy of Science have found that in many of the world’s protected areas, non-native ‘invasive species’ were living close by.