University of Cambridge Research Horizons

University of Cambridge Research Horizons

HRESOEARRCH IZONS In this issue BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION plus objects of devotion, an infrastructure revolution and the making of modern Germany University of Cambridge research magazine www.cam.ac.uk/research/ Issue 17 2 | Guest editorial Contents Issue 17, February 2012 Biodiversity conservation M A R K Research news 3–5 M N I S Z K Spotlight: 6–17 O Biodiversity conservation Research, policy, practice: 6–7 conservation in the round Canopy commerce: forest 8–9 conservation and poverty alleviation The crystal ball of 10 –11 conservation Conservation clusters: 12 making the case Games for nature 13 A lost world? How 14 –15 zooarchaeology can inform biodiversity conservation Landscape, literature, life 16 –17 Cambridge is famous as the centre of ‘Silicon Fen’ – the cluster of high-tech businesses drawn together geographically by the benefits of a world-leading research-intensive University and Preview 18 –19 rich networking opportunities. Much less well known is the fact that Cambridge is home to one of the world’s largest clusters of people and institutions working to understand and Kaiser, Reich and the making conserve global biodiversity. of modern Germany Life on Earth is at risk from an unprecedented rate of environmental change that threatens the natural resources on which humanity depends. Biodiversity – the genes, species and Features 20 –31 ecosystems that comprise nature – provides food, fuel, medicines and other vital ‘ecosystem Autophagy: when 20 –21 services’, along with countless intangible benefits, for society. ‘self-eating’ is good for you But biodiversity is in steep decline, and its sustainable management is a major challenge for the 21st century. In response, Cambridge researchers from diverse disciplines, along with Objects of devotion 22 –23 conservation practitioners and policy experts – all linked to global networks – have created the Cambridge Conservation Initiative (CCI). As a partnership between the University and world- Infrastructure revolution 24 –25 leading conservation organisations 1, CCI aims to help secure a sustainable future for Flower power: how to get 26 biodiversity and humanity through interdisciplinary and innovative research, learning, ahead in advertising leadership and action. Some of the collaborations between researchers and practitioners described in this issue Solar-grade silicon at low cost 27 of Research Horizons illustrate how this University Strategic Initiative is addressing global challenges. Achieving food security while conserving the raw materials provided by It’s not history 28 –29 biodiversity, reducing carbon emissions and alleviating poverty through forest conservation, Extreme Sleepover: 30 –31 and measuring the benefits an area’s biodiversity brings to society are but three of 14 projects breathless at Everest Base Camp supported through the CCI Collaborative Fund that offer solutions to real-world problems. Similarly, we see how innovative thinking can begin to transform the landscape of The back page 32 biodiversity conservation. Studies which identify new emerging issues for biodiversity conservation, which explore whether computer gaming can reconnect people to nature, and which draw on disciplines as diverse as business, archaeology and English show how Images of Gola Forest, Cambridge offers a distinct and often novel approach to conservation. Sierra Leone, a biodiversity hotspot of Over the next three years, our vision is to create an interdisciplinary conservation campus global significance. at the heart of the University, bringing together over 500 professional conservationists from Read about innovative across organisations and University departments, in a centre of international conservation approaches for protecting the forest’s excellence. The campus will facilitate and sustain the flow of conservation research and future on page 8. practical solutions, enhance global conservation capacity and leadership, and help to Original photography: transform public understanding of nature. David Monticelli, Jeremy Lindsell, Koen Leuveld; image manipulation: Fred Lewsey and Nick Saffell. Editor: Dr Louise Walsh Design: Cambridge Design Studio Dr Mike Rands Printers: Falcon Printing Executive Director, Cambridge Conservation Initiative Contributors: Alex Buxton, Tom Kirk, Fred Lewsey, Genevieve Maul, Stuart Roberts, Louise Walsh; others as identified 1CCI partners: BirdLife International, British Trust for Ornithology, Cambridge Conservation Forum, Fauna & ©2012 University of Cambridge and Flora International, International Union for Conservation of Nature, RSPB, TRAFFIC International, Tropical Contributors as identified. All rights reserved. Biology Association, UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre, University of Cambridge Research news | 3 Cambridge gives Newton papers to the world Cambridge University Library has launched its new digital library by making available online Isaac Newton’s papers, including his own annotated copy of his Principia Mathematica . R E The Library holds the world’s largest and most P R O significant collection of the scientific works of D U C E Isaac Newton (1642 –1727), described by many D B Y as the greatest and most influential scientist K I N who ever lived. Now, more than 4,000 pages of D P E its most important Newton material has been R M I S uploaded to the Cambridge Digital Library to S I O N view and download anywhere in the world, O F with more to follow over the next few months. T H E S Within a day of its announcement, the site had Y N D recorded millions of hits. I C S The University Library aims to develop O F C a digital library for the world and will move A M B on from Newton to some of its other R I D G world-class collections in the realms of E U N science and faith. These will include the I V E R archive of the celebrated Board of Longitude, S I T Y a selection from the Darwin papers and L I B R some of the earliest surviving religious A R manuscripts. Y “Over the course of six centuries Cambridge University Library’s collections Some of Newton’s early calculations for determining the area of a hyperbola, 1665; MS.Add.3958 folio 79r have grown from a few dozen volumes into one of the world’s great libraries, with an in June 2010. For the digital launch of the “Newton’s copy of his Principia shows how extraordinary accumulation of books, maps, Newton papers, the Library has been aided by methodically he worked through his text; manuscripts and journals,” said University funding from JISC (Joint Information Services marking alterations, crossing out and Librarian Anne Jarvis. “These cover every Committee), which has enabled the linking of annotating his work in preparation for the conceivable aspect of human endeavour, the Library’s high-resolution facsimiles with second edition. Before today, anyone who spanning most of the world’s cultural transcriptions produced by the Newton wanted to see these things had to come to traditions.” Project at the University of Sussex. Cambridge. Now we’re bringing Cambridge The digitisation of the Newton papers and “Now, anyone, wherever they are, can see University Library to the world.” development of the sophisticated technical at the click of a mouse how Newton worked infrastructure that will underpin the new and how he went about developing his For more information about the digital library were made possible by a £1.5 theories and experiments,” added Grant Cambridge Digital Library, please visit million lead gift from the Polonsky Foundation Young, Digitisation Manager at the Library. http://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/ Cambridge-Elan Centre for Research Innovation and Drug Discovery launched World-leading researchers will work together on therapeutic advances in neuroscience. The Cambridge-Elan Centre, which will be world leaders in the development of Elan Centre, Professor Christopher located at the University, will provide a therapies to combat neurodegenerative Dobson FRS, the John Humphrey highly interdisciplinary environment disorders, these compounds will be Plummer Professor of Chemical and uniquely positioned for delivering world- translated into new treatments to prevent Structural Biology at the Department of leading translational research focused on such diseases. A new ten-year agreement Chemistry, said: “I believe that we are innovative therapies for Alzheimer’s and paves the way for a long-term creating a Centre that will become Parkinson’s diseases. collaboration between Elan and the globally recognised for innovation. Our For more than 10 years, Cambridge University of Cambridge. collective expertise, proven ability to scientists have been engaged in research The process of bringing together collaborate and open innovation model to understand the fundamental molecular researchers at the University of provide an exciting basis for the origins of neurodegenerative disorders Cambridge and at Elan has already future. The new Centre will bring together such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s created novel insights and opportunities the skills of scientists working in an diseases. The primary goal of the new in drug discovery. The new Centre builds academic institution and in a Centre will be to extend these activities to on the successes of this initial interaction biotechnology company to develop new discover novel compounds and to to establish a long-term relationship to and more effective therapies for some of characterise the fundamental physico- lead to novel and effective therapies for the most devastating and increasingly chemical mechanisms by which they alter

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