
About this Event
PLEASE NOTE: THIS EVENT IS IN EDINBURGH.
Please do consider a donation. Even the smallest donation goes a long way in helping us deliver our nature outreach work.
Biodiversity on our planet is under increasing threat, reflected in rising rates of extinction and collapse in census numbers of a wide range of species. This existential crisis comes at the same time as we are building understanding of biodiversity in exquisite detail.
Genome sequencing - deciphering the DNA blueprint of a species - is a fundamental tool in this work. The Wellcome Sanger Institute is famous for sequencing the human genome 25 years ago. Today we are turning the power of the Sanger’s genome sequencing power towards sequencing biodiversity: plants, animals, fungi and protists - “sequencing life for the future of life”.
We collaborate with museums, botanic gardens and many others to source specimens, which we process and sequence at Sanger, and we recently celebrated the public release of our three-thousandth genome sequence. These genomes reveal the biology of species in new ways, and we have uncovered some very surprising novelties in our journey to date.
leads the Sanger Institute’s Tree of Life programme, generating and analysing genome sequences from thousands of species across the tree of life, especially Britain and Ireland (the Darwin Tree of Life project). His research focuses on the interpretation of those genomes in ecological and evolutionary contexts. Before joining Sanger, he was Professor of Evolutionary Genomics in the University of Edinburgh. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 2014.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Anatomy Lecture Theater, Doorway 3, University of Edinburgh Medical School, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00
