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Dr Stephanie Jones

Research Interests: Greenhouse gas emissions from grasslands Carbon and nitrogen budgets Ammonia measurements (gradient technique) from grasslands Chamber measurement techniques (N2O, CO2, CH4) Current Research Projects: Pilot study on feasibility of on-farm field sampling of GHG fluxes (esp N2O). Quality meat Scotland (QMS) funded. Measurements using standard static chamber techniques comparing with an open dynamic chamber using photo acoustic measurements in order to understand the different measurement approaches, and in particular evaluate the performance of the new automatic technique for

New appointment to James Hutton Institute Board of Directors

"Graeme brings new and strategically-important insights, skills and knowledge to the Board that will contribute to keeping Hutton developing, responsive and doing relevant science" The James Hutton Institute today announced the appointment of Mr Graeme Dickson, former senior civil servant and energy specialist, to its Board of Directors as a non-executive director. Mr Dickson’s appointment is part of the normal process of rolling Board renewal. Mr Dickson trained as a geologist and worked in the oil industry as a geophysicist prior to joining the civil service, holding positions in the

Food for thought – exploring the food-gut-brain axis in Alzheimer’s disease

Gut health has long been linked with disease. It was over 2,000 years ago when the Greek physician Hippocrates, oft-lauded as the father of modern medicine, is purported to have made the proclamation, which is still influencing current day researchers and practitioners in medicine: “All disease begins in the gut” Hippocrates of Kos (Hippokrátēs ho Kṓos: c. 460–c. 370 BCE) There are many factors that have a modulating effect on the brain and on the gut microbiota, including socioeconomic status, diet, congenital factors, environmental factors, exercise and activity levels, medications such as

Dr Lynsey Melville

Lynsey is a post-doc at Moredun Research working on anthelmintic resistance in sheep and cattle worms

Nematodirus battus: Is it likely to spiral out of control?

Farming practices are evolving in response to intensification, diversification and climate change. As farm management has changed, pathogens of livestock have also adapted to optimise their reproduction and transmission opportunities. Our work, supported by Animal and Horticultural Development Board (AHDB), has focused on the control and biology of the economically important roundworm Nematodirus battus; a gut roundworm which annually threatens the health and welfare of young lambs across the UK. Our research has explored how Nematodirus behaves on commercial sheep farms. We have mapped the

Arable Scotland 2020: programme announced

"The event will feature a virtual site so that anyone can tour the science, specialist and industry expertise that would have been available at the actual in-field event" The programme for Arable Scotland 2020, Scotland's newest field event focussing on arable crops, has been announced. This year's event is taking place online and will major on alternative crops and new markets. More information from: Bernardo Rodriguez-Salcedo, Media Manager, James Hutton Institute, Tel: +44 (0)1224 395089 (direct line), +44 (0)344 928 5428 (switchboard) or +44 (0)7791 193918 (mobile). read more

World Environment Day

Friday the 5th of June is the United Nations World Environment Day and the theme for 2020 is biodiversity. In recognition of this, we have brought together a selection of our case studies around this topic. Below you can read more about how our researchers are exploring how to make ecosystems more resilient, have established a genetic scorecard for measuring genetic diversity, developed a suite of environmental indicators to monitor ecosystem health and investigated which values are most relevant to protecting biodiversity in Scotland. Learning By Doing: Understanding and Managing for

World Environment Day: it’s time for nature

"We are extremely well placed to help society by understanding the impacts of rapid biodiversity loss and finding routes to sustainable management that can help reverse them" Biodiversity —the variety of species, the genes within them, and the habitats in which they live— is threatened like never before. According to figures from the United Nations Environment Programme, we are on the verge of mass extinction: within the next 10 years, around 1 million species may be wiped off the surface of the planet - one out of every four known species. Wildlife has declined on average by over 60 per cent

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