
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Episode 363
Suzanne Simard is a world-renowned forest ecologist who shot to stardom with her first book Finding the Mother Tree. It tells the story of her life’s work, showing trees and plants are connected through fungal networks, demonstrating a kind of wisdom and intelligence.
Now, with the release of her latest book When the Forest Breathes, she’s keen to highlight the destructive and extractive forestry practices of the modern age - and why Western science needs an update.
Rowan Hooper sits down with Simard under the famous Lucombe Oak in London’s Kew Gardens.
Together they explore the concept of the ‘wood wide web’, the name given to her breakthrough work showing communication between forest trees via an underground fungal network. They discuss the scientific backlash that came when she popularised this work and how it all came at a particularly difficult time in her life. And they explore her time spent with indigenous peoples in the Amazon rainforest.
As Simard aims to make us view forest ecosystems in a more holistic and regenerative way - what will it take to truly change the industry?
To read more stories like this, visit https://www.newscientist.com/
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By New Scientist4.4
9292 ratings
Episode 363
Suzanne Simard is a world-renowned forest ecologist who shot to stardom with her first book Finding the Mother Tree. It tells the story of her life’s work, showing trees and plants are connected through fungal networks, demonstrating a kind of wisdom and intelligence.
Now, with the release of her latest book When the Forest Breathes, she’s keen to highlight the destructive and extractive forestry practices of the modern age - and why Western science needs an update.
Rowan Hooper sits down with Simard under the famous Lucombe Oak in London’s Kew Gardens.
Together they explore the concept of the ‘wood wide web’, the name given to her breakthrough work showing communication between forest trees via an underground fungal network. They discuss the scientific backlash that came when she popularised this work and how it all came at a particularly difficult time in her life. And they explore her time spent with indigenous peoples in the Amazon rainforest.
As Simard aims to make us view forest ecosystems in a more holistic and regenerative way - what will it take to truly change the industry?
To read more stories like this, visit https://www.newscientist.com/
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

863 Listeners

5,576 Listeners

1,952 Listeners

599 Listeners

756 Listeners

544 Listeners

965 Listeners

410 Listeners

429 Listeners

756 Listeners

746 Listeners

227 Listeners

841 Listeners

363 Listeners

471 Listeners

2 Listeners

6 Listeners

7 Listeners

1 Listeners