Brian Eversham
@brianecambs.bsky.social
Wildlife enthusiast, photographer, elms/lichens/beetles/molluscs/testate amoebae and much else. CEO Wildlife Trust BCN, occasional leader for Wildlife Travel, visiting prof., Cranfield Uni. Views my own. He/him
Reposted by Brian Eversham
Like Australia. It's all about bums on seats. There's already a short fall of graduates - plant science majors walk straight into jobs
November 10, 2025 at 7:45 PM
Like Australia. It's all about bums on seats. There's already a short fall of graduates - plant science majors walk straight into jobs
Reposted by Brian Eversham
And finally, Lubo’s message to the young: LESS COMPUTER, MORE COLLECTING
November 9, 2025 at 4:38 PM
And finally, Lubo’s message to the young: LESS COMPUTER, MORE COLLECTING
Reposted by Brian Eversham
"The economy is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the environment."
- Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day Founder, Wisconsin Governor and Senator. Friend.
- Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day Founder, Wisconsin Governor and Senator. Friend.
November 1, 2025 at 2:56 PM
"The economy is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the environment."
- Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day Founder, Wisconsin Governor and Senator. Friend.
- Gaylord Nelson, Earth Day Founder, Wisconsin Governor and Senator. Friend.
Reposted by Brian Eversham
One striking result is that the dangers of the dramatic decline in natural ecosystems and biodiversity (in oceans and on land) are not widely recognised by the general public, and I would say are still underestimated by the experts. We all ultimately depend on a functioning biosphere.
October 31, 2025 at 9:57 AM
One striking result is that the dangers of the dramatic decline in natural ecosystems and biodiversity (in oceans and on land) are not widely recognised by the general public, and I would say are still underestimated by the experts. We all ultimately depend on a functioning biosphere.
Thanks for the link, Philip. I have the 1970 reprint of his 7-volume Trees of Great Britain and Ireland. It's a remarkable compendium, and written at sufficient length for anecdote and speculation too.
October 26, 2025 at 2:11 PM
Thanks for the link, Philip. I have the 1970 reprint of his 7-volume Trees of Great Britain and Ireland. It's a remarkable compendium, and written at sufficient length for anecdote and speculation too.