Professor Katherine Willis
Projects
The role of volatile organic compounds in physical and mental wellbeing outcomes
Understanding the role of local vegetation in mosquito feeding behaviour
Potential for collaboration with green health initiatives in Oxfordshire
An investigation into the impact of vegetation on mental health in Birmingham
What ecosystem services are provided by rewilding?
The role of plant biodiversity in delivering ecosystem services that underpin human well-being
Soil carbon and farm productivity implications of regenerative agriculture
Vegetation response to climate change: a functional traits-based approach
HumBug: using smartphones to record and identify mosquitoes by their flight tones
Evidence Based Forestry & Land Use
Palaeo-Trophic Cascades (PACE)
The Central American Isthmus: Ecological Dynamics of the Middle-Late Holocene
The Role of Soil Nutrients in Arctic Greening
Local Ecological Footprinting Tool (LEFT)
Systemic Integrated Adaptation planning framework
Linking soil management to ecosystem functions and services in oil palm plantings
Resilience of Tropical Peat Swamp Forests
Holocene tree-cover in Europe and implications for re-wilding strategies
Impact of EU Agri-environment policies on ecosystem functioning
Resilience of Southeast Asian Lowland Rainforest to large-scale climatic changes
Disturbance regimes in Central African Rainforests
Retrospectively evaluating the effectiveness of Community Based Conservation projects in Madagascar
80,000 years of climate change and forest resilience in the Eastern Mediterranean
Optimising Protected Area Networks in Europe
Agro-economic and ecological impact of GM and non-GM cotton farming in India
Long Term Biodiversity Change of Canary Islands
Floods & Droughts: Environmental Dynamics in the Upper Zambezi Valley
Professor Baroness Katherine Willis
Katherine (Kathy) Willis, CBE, is Professor of Biodiversity in the department of Biology and the Principal of St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford. She is also a Crossbench Peer in the House of Lords. Previous roles include Director of Science at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and a member of the UK Government’s Natural Capital Committee.
Her research falls into three categories. First, the determination of how plant biodiversity responds, from decades to millennia, to climate change and other environmental drivers. Second, the flow and spatial distribution of critical ecosystem services that we obtain from nature such as the draw-down of atmospheric CO2, flood risk protection, clean water, and soil erosion. Third, the relationship between biodiversity and human health (good and bad). ‘Bad’ includes ongoing mosquito projects associated with the HumBug and IVCC projects. ‘Good’, is a relatively new but rapidly expanding research avenue to examine the mechanisms of action that occur when our senses (sight, smell, sound, and touch and the hidden sense of the environmental microbiome) interact with certain aspects of nature, to bring about positive physical and mental health outcomes.
In addition to her research work, Kathy has led a number of initiatives to assimilate global knowledge on plant (and fungal) biodiversity change including State of the World’s Plants (2016, 2017), State of the World’s Fungi (2018) and as a lead author on the 2019 Global Assessment of Biodiversity for the Intergovernmental Panel on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services.
Kathy’s public communication of science has included writing and presenting the 25-part BBC Radio 4 series From Roots to Riches, and presenting, interviews and appearances on, among other programmes, BBC One - Sir David Attenborough’s Extinction, The Facts; the BBC World Service two-part series Feeding the World; and The Life Scientific;. Most recently she has appeared on BBC One Greta Thunberg a year to change the world, BBC Four Nature and Us: A History through Art and the BBC World Service - The Evidence - the nature of mental health. Kathy was awarded the Michael Faraday Medal for public communication of science from the Royal Society in 2015.
Kathy has also published around 200 academic papers (Google scholar), three books and two edited volumes: The Evolution of Plants (Oxford University Press); Biodiversity in the Green Economy (Routledge); Key Topics in Conservation Biology 2 (Wiley); Roots to Riches (John Murray), based on the BBC series of the same name; and Botanicum (Big Picture Press) which is part of a successful series of books for children.
Latest book: "Good Nature: The New Science of How Nature improves Our Health" (Bloomsbury, 2024)
Selected Publications