For the past year, I have had the honour of working amongst
those who have made it possible to return to the gardens of Eden. Fuelled by
visionary optimism, collaboration and creativity, for the past 15 years a
cohort of individuals has come together to create a spectacle of plants, but
also a reflection of our place in the living world. The Eden Project is
difficult to describe, even for those who work there on a daily basis, but I
would place it somewhere along an axis ranging from botanical garden to
ecological theme park.
As part of my PhD research, I have been examining what goes
on in the soil which forms at the top of trees, and how that is influenced by
the plants and insects which make the rainforest canopy their home. Rainforests
are few and far between in the UK, but the tropical biome at the Eden Project,
a self-contained simulation of temperature, humidity and rainfall, with the
vegetation to match has allowed me to trial my tests before leaving the shores
of not-so-tropical Blighty.
The biomes of Eden became my personal
playground-come-laboratory, and during the golden hours of 7-10am, before the
public came to witness the spectacle, I was able to pass through the back door
and set up my experiments. With the help of Eden’s green fingered horticultural
team, and the acrobatic ‘sky monkeys’, I was able to recreate my own rainforest
canopy, which whilst not immediately comparable to those found in nature, has
allowed me to make the initial steps towards understanding the real deal.
Beyond the science, the Eden Project reignited my belief
that it is possible to discuss the crisis which nature faces to the wider
general public, whilst avoiding cynicism and projecting hope. The biomes
provide a forum for discussion, and I myself was able to present my science and
discuss its relevance on a daily basis with people from all walks of life. By
focusing on the beauty and bounty which nature has to offer, and by
communicating what threatens this, it is difficult to leave the place without
feeling galvanised into action. Whilst saddened to walk out of the back door
one last time, I certainly felt that understanding the natural world remains an
achievable and important task if it is to be protected for future generations
to come.
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