Natural Environment Research Council

Natural Environment Research Council NERC is the UK's main agency for funding and managing research, training and knowledge exchange in the environmental sciences.

Our work covers the full range of atmospheric, earth, biological, terrestrial and aquatic science, from the deep oceans to the upper atmosphere and from the poles to the equator. We co-ordinate some of the world's most exciting research projects, tackling major issues such as climate change, environmental influences on human health, the genetic make-up of life on Earth, and much more. NERC is a no

n-departmental public body. We receive around £370m of annual funding from the Department for Business, Innovation & Skills (BIS).

The new UKRI website is launching soon! For the first time we’re bringing together all our news and funding opportunitie...
23/10/2020

The new UKRI website is launching soon! For the first time we’re bringing together all our news and funding opportunities from across the councils.
Find out more:

We are creating a unified UKRI website that brings together the existing research council, Innovate UK and Research England websites. If you would like to be involved in its development let us know.

Merry Christmas to our community! Whether you're curled up on the sofa or out in the field, we hope it's a great one 🌍
25/12/2019

Merry Christmas to our community! Whether you're curled up on the sofa or out in the field, we hope it's a great one 🌍

Silent night: Did you know that some crickets have lost the ability to sing? It's for good reason - to avoid being eaten...
18/12/2019

Silent night: Did you know that some crickets have lost the ability to sing? It's for good reason - to avoid being eaten inside out!

Male crickets rub special structures on the their wings together to make their songs. Different species have different structures, leading to different-sounding songs - almost as if every species has evolved its own musical instrument. The males sing to attract a mate. Unfortunately for field crickets in Hawaii, the song also attracts the unwanted attention of parasitic flies, who sq**rt their eggs all over the crickets. When the eggs hatch, the larvae burrow into the cricket and eat it alive - lovely!

The benefits of avoiding the flies are so great that some males in the population have lost the structures on their wings that they need to sing, with only tiny remnants remaining. Researchers noticed this evolution in action and wondered whether the leftover wing structures could eventually re-evolve to make a different 'musical instrument'. What happened next taught them some fascinating things about how different species can evolve over a relatively short space of time.

Read the whole story here: https://nerc.ukri.org/planetearth/stories/1931/

Image © Getty Images

28/09/2019

A new poem – ‘Ark’ – by Poet Laureate Simon Armitage CBE, commemorates the naming of the RRS Sir David Attenborough.

The poem was premiered in front of thousands of people gathered at Cammell Laird for the RRS Sir David Attenborough ship naming ceremony.

Ark

They sent out a dove: it wobbled home,
wings slicked in a rainbow of oil,
a sprig of tinsel snagged in its beak,
a yard of fishing-line binding its feet.

Bring back, bring back the leaf.

They sent out an arctic fox:
it plodded the bays
of the northern fringe
in muddy socks
and a nylon cape.

Bring back, bring back the leaf.
Bring back the reed and the reef,
set the ice sheet back on its frozen plinth,
tuck the restless watercourse into its bed,
sit the glacier down on its highland throne,
put the snow cap back on the mountain peak.

Let the northern lights be the northern lights
not the alien glow over Glasgow or Leeds.

A camel capsized in a tropical flood.
Caimans dozed in Antarctic lakes.
Polymers rolled in the sturgeon’s blood.
Hippos wandered the housing estates.

Bring back, bring back the leaf.
Bring back the tusk and the horn
unshorn.
Bring back the fern, the fish, the frond and the fowl,
the golden toad and the pygmy owl,
revisit the scene
where swallowtails fly
through acres of unexhausted sky.

They sent out a boat.
Go little breaker,
splinter the pack-ice and floes, nose
through the rafts and pads
of wrappers and bottles and nurdles and cans,
the bergs and atolls and islands and states
of plastic bags and micro-beads
and the forests of smoke.

Bring back, bring back the leaf,
bring back the river and sea.

Simon Armitage CBE, Poet Laureate

27/09/2019

From engineering apprentices helping to build the new polar ship to scientists who will sail on her across the oceans there are many career paths that have led to people working with, or in the future, on the RRS Sir David Attenborough.

Here some of them share their experiences and consider how the project has shaped their careers.

Pic copyright Phil Tragen 2019
27/09/2019

Pic copyright Phil Tragen 2019

RRS Sir David Attenborough polar ship naming ceremony with Sir David Attenborough and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.

26/09/2019

The moment when the Duchess of Cambridge officially named

Let us take you on a virtual tour of the    :
26/09/2019

Let us take you on a virtual tour of the :

Explore the RRS Sir David Attenborough with hi-impact media's virtual tour of this incredible new ship.

26/09/2019

For 60 years the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) has been responsible for most of the UK’s scientific research in Antarctica. BAS has its roots in Operation Tabarin, a secret World War Two mission with a dual scientific role.

Find out more about the British Antarctic Survey http://bit.ly/2mQKVWD

Royal naming for Sir David Attenborough polar shipThe Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will officially name the UK's new po...
26/09/2019

Royal naming for Sir David Attenborough polar ship

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will officially name the UK's new polar research ship after Sir David Attenborough today.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will celebrate the introduction of the UK's new polar research vessel.

25/09/2019

Tomorrow the RRS Sir David Attenborough – one of the most advanced polar research vessels in the world - will be officially named.

Watch this time lapse video of her construction

Find out more: http://bit.ly/2lvdA3r

Antarctic Survey

25/09/2019

Find out what life is like on board the RRS Sir David Attenborough.

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