Ecosystem Services & Conservation

Ecosystem Services & Conservation

Our well being is fundamentally linked to healthy ecosystems. To expand our knowledge of these connections, the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment supports interdisciplinary work probing human impacts on nature and shapes new conservation paradigms. Woods convenes workshops and dialogues to expand awareness of nature’s values and ways to sustain them. These events have laid the foundation for partnerships such as the Natural Capital Project, a pioneering initiative transforming how governments and businesses factor nature’s value into decision-making. Woods works to inform those decisions by sharing findings of Stanford’s world-class biologists, ecologists, social scientists and others. Woods centers and affiliated scholars are provide cutting-edge research, support networks and practical tools to create solutions that benefit people and nature.

In The News

Climate Change: Why Indonesia's Forests are Crucial to Emission Curbs

Senior Woods Fellow Lisa Curran (Environmental Anthropoligy) states that there's no quick fix to illegal fires being set in Indonesia.
December 3, 2015 - By Michael Holtz, Christian Science Monitor

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Study Says Meal Worms May Reduce Plastic Waste

Profiles research by Senior Fellow Craig Criddle (Civil and Environmental Engineering) and others on plastic-eating mealworms.
December 2, 2015 - By Mark Niu, CCTV America

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Tackling Plastic Pollution With Worms

Quotes Senior Fellow Craig Criddle on the surprising results of research on Styrofoam-eating mealworms.
November 4, 2015 - By Ben Gruber, Reuters

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Scientists’ Warning: Extinction of Big Land Animals Forever Alters Environment

Profiles paper co-authored by Woods Senior Fellow Elizabeth Hadly (Biology) on extinctions of large animals in North and South America since humans...
October 26, 2015 - By Peter Fimrite , SF Gate

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