Katherine Willis, Baroness Willis of Summertown

Last updated

The Baroness Willis of Summertown
Kathy Willis at Kew during the 2017 lecture in London, 2017-11-10.jpg
Willis in 2017
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Assumed office
8 July 2022
Life peerage
Personal details
Born
Katherine Jane Willis

(1964-01-16) 16 January 1964 (age 59)
London, England
Political partyNone (crossbench)
Spouse
(m. 1992)
Children3
Alma mater
Awards
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Thesis Late Quaternary vegetational history of Epirus, northwest Greece  (1990)

Katherine Jane Willis, Baroness Willis of Summertown, CBE , FGS (born 16 January 1964) [3] is a British biologist, academic and life peer, who studies the relationship between long-term ecosystem dynamics and environmental change. She is Professor of Biodiversity in the Department of Zoology at the University of Oxford, [4] and an adjunct professor in biology at the University of Bergen. In 2018 she was elected Principal of St Edmund Hall, and took up the position from 1 October. [5] She held the Tasso Leventis Chair of Biodiversity at Oxford and was founding Director, now Associate Director, of the Biodiversity Institute Oxford. [6] [7] Willis was Director of Science at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew from 2013 to 2018. [8] Her nomination by the House of Lords Appointments Commission as a crossbench life peer was announced on 17 May 2022.

Contents

Early life and education

Katherine Jane Willis was born on 16 January 1964 in London to Edward George Willis and Winifred Ellen Willis ( née  Dymond). [3] She gained an undergraduate degree in geography and environmental science from the University of Southampton, and a PhD in plant sciences from the University of Cambridge for research on the vegetational history of the late Quaternary period in Epirus, northwest Greece. [9]

Career and research

At the University of Cambridge, Willis held a postdoctoral research fellowship at Selwyn College, a Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) postdoctoral fellowship in the Department of Plant Sciences, and a Royal Society University Research Fellowship (URF) in the Godwin Institute for Quaternary Research. In 1999, she moved to a lectureship in the School of Geography and the Environment at the University of Oxford, where she established the Oxford Long-term Ecology Laboratory in 2002. Willis was made a professor of long-term ecology in 2008, [10] and in October 2010 became the first Tasso Leventis Professor of Biodiversity and director of the James Martin Biodiversity Institute in Zoology.[ citation needed ] She was also an adjunct professor in the Department of Biology at the University of Bergen, Norway.[ citation needed ] She is a trustee of WWF-UK, [11] a panel member on the advisory board for the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission, a trustee of the Percy Sladen Memorial Trust, an international member on the Swedish Research Council's FORMAS evaluation panel, and a college member of the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).[ citation needed ] From 2012 to 2013 she held the elected position of director-at-large of the International Biogeography Society. [12] In 2013, she was appointed Director of Science at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, [8] on a 5-year secondment from the University of Oxford. [13] On 1 October 2018, Willis succeeded Keith Gull as Principal of St Edmund Hall, Oxford. [14]

Willis's research [15] focuses on reconstructing long term responses of ecosystems to environmental change, including climate change, human impact and sea level rise. She argues that understanding long-term records of ecosystem change is essential for a proper understanding of future ecosystem responses. Many scientific studies are limited to short-term datasets that rarely span more than 40 to 50 years, although many larger organisms, including trees and large mammals, have an average generation time which exceeds this timescale. Short-term records therefore are unable to reconstruct natural variability over time, or the rates of migration as a result of environmental change. She also argues that a short-term approach gives a static view of ecosystems, and leads to the conceptual formation of an unrealistic "norm" which must be maintained or restored and protected. Her research group in the Oxford Long-term Ecology laboratory therefore attempts to reconstruct ecosystem responses to environmental change on timescales ranging from tens to millions of years, and the applications of long-term records in biodiversity conservation. She has argued that the impacts of contemporary climate change on plant biota is uncertain and potentially not as severe as researchers envision, [16] and challenged assumptions made in the interpretation of spatially constrained temperature records. [17] Kew's State of the World's Plants report (2016) pinpoints land cover change as the major threat to global biodiversity, not climate change. [18]

Willis's research has been published in Nature , [19] Science , [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B , [25] Biological Conservation. [26] and Quaternary Science Reviews . [27] With Jennifer McElwain [28] she co-authored the textbook The Evolution of Plants. [29] Her research has been funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC). [30]

House of Lords

She was nominated as a life peer by the House of Lords Appointments Commission on 17 May 2022. [31] She was created Baroness Willis of Summertown on 8 July 2022. [32] Hers was the last peerage created by Elizabeth II. She made her maiden speech on 8 September 2022 during a debate on Climate Change and Biodiversity: Food Security. [33] She sits as a non-party-political crossbench peer. [34]

Personal life

Willis married Andrew Gant, a composer and Liberal Democrat politician, [35] in 1992. They have two sons and a daughter. [3]

Awards and honours

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References

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  18. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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  20. Willis, K. J.; Bhagwat, S. A. (2009). "Ecology. Biodiversity and climate change". Science. 326 (5954): 806–7. doi:10.1126/science.1178838. PMID   19892969. S2CID   10981263.
  21. Van Leeuwen, J. F. N.; Froyd, C. A.; Van Der Knaap, W. O.; Coffey, E. E.; Tye, A.; Willis, K. J. (2008). "Fossil Pollen as a Guide to Conservation in the Galapagos". Science. 322 (5905): 1206. Bibcode:2008Sci...322.1206V. doi:10.1126/science.1163454. PMID   19023075. S2CID   46449794.
  22. Willis, K. J. (1999). "The Role of Sub-Milankovitch Climatic Forcing in the Initiation of the Northern Hemisphere Glaciation". Science. 285 (5427): 568–571. doi:10.1126/science.285.5427.568. PMID   10417383.
  23. Willis, K. J.; Birks, H. J. B. (2006). "What is Natural? The Need for a Long-Term Perspective in Biodiversity Conservation". Science. 314 (5803): 1261–1265. Bibcode:2006Sci...314.1261W. CiteSeerX   10.1.1.549.5178 . doi:10.1126/science.1122667. PMID   17124315. S2CID   9632680.
  24. Willis, K. J. (2002). "Ecology: Enhanced: Species Diversity--Scale Matters". Science. 295 (5558): 1245–1248. doi:10.1126/science.1067335. PMID   11847328. S2CID   5344099.
  25. Willis, K. J.; Bennett, K. D.; Burrough, S. L.; Macias-Fauria, M.; Tovar, C. (2013). "Determining the response of African biota to climate change: Using the past to model the future". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 368 (1625): 20120491. doi:10.1098/rstb.2012.0491. PMC   3720034 . PMID   23878343.
  26. Willis, K. J.; Jeffers, E. S.; Tovar, C.; Long, P. R.; Caithness, N.; Smit, M. G. D.; Hagemann, R.; Collin-Hansen, C.; Weissenberger, J. (2012). "Determining the ecological value of landscapes beyond protected areas". Biological Conservation. 147: 3–12. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2011.11.001.
  27. Froyd, C. A.; Willis, K. J. (2008). "Emerging issues in biodiversity & conservation management: The need for a palaeoecological perspective". Quaternary Science Reviews. 27 (17–18): 1723–1732. Bibcode:2008QSRv...27.1723F. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2008.06.006.
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