Go behind the science with Rodolfo Dirzo
The Stanford ecologist traces quiet shifts in the natural world – and how they circle back to human health. PhD student Phil Roberge takes us on a tour of his lab.
Growing up in southern Mexico, Rodolfo Dirzo watched fragments of forest vanish before his eyes and never stopped asking why. Now at Stanford, his lab investigates the compounding forces reshaping our natural world: land use change, biodiversity loss, and pollution – none of which operate in isolation, he says.
Using specialized equipment like laser-triggered cameras and harmless traps that bait creatures with an irresistible mixture of peanut butter and honey, his team captures the quiet shifts occurring in ecosystems around us, and how they ultimately circle back to human health.