Dr Beth Nicholls

Dr Beth Nicholls is an established Research Fellow in the department of Evolution, Behaviour and Environment (School of Life Sciences), with a particular interest in the behaviour of bees.

Beth at Thompson road allotment in Brighton to survey pollinating insects visiting flowering crops, to determine whether there are sufficient insects to provide adequate pollination to crops grown in urban and peri-urban areas. 


Beth's story

Her postdoctoral work with the Sussex Sustainability Research Programme (SSRP) was a key milestone in her early career as a researcher. 

Research with SSRP

Back in 2017, Prof Dave Goulson recruited Beth to coordinate the SSRP-funded project ‘People, pollinators and pesticides in peri-urban farming', an opportunity that she embraced to the fullest. Funding from SSRP allowed her to work for two years on this project, which studied two contrasting peri-urban systems: Brighton and Hove, UK; and Kolkata, India. Beth led the British side of the project, which piloted a ‘citizen science’ approach of data collection where urban growers monitored pollinators and crop yields. This methodology was then replicated in India, through a collaboration with the Centre for Agroecology & Pollination Studies, 5XÉçÇøÊÓƵ of Calcutta. Beth learned about co-creating research with stakeholders, such as engaging directly with Indian farmers to develop creative methods of data collection.  

By leading on an SSRP project and designing many aspects of the research, I really developed my own independence.

Media engagement

By quantifying the productivity of urban farms in Brighton and Hove, and the percentage of the harvest owed to insect pollination, Beth showed that the yields from small urban spaces for some crops were comparable to those from conventional farms. This significant finding, previously published in a , caused a stir in the media, with coverage by BBC Radio 4 and articles in , , The Telegraph, and The Independent highlighting the important role of urban food production in food security and sustainability.  

Interdisciplinary networks

Networking events curated by the SSRP were instrumental to support the interdisciplinary nature of Beth’s project:  

I always wanted to bring more social sciences into my research, because particularly in conservation it is very important to try and include the perspectives of all the different stakeholders, and being part of the SSRP really helped me to connect with researchers from other departments and learn more about the methods they used.

 

More recently, the SSRP has helped Beth engage with scholars from agricultural economics, engineeringand geography, who are interested in urban farming in the South African context and with whom she plans to write a grant proposal.

Partnerships

Through her involvement with the SSRP project, Beth built a network of growers and food-focused organisations in Brighton and Hove, such as the Brighton and Hove Food Partnership and the Brighton Permaculture Trust. Now, she aims to formalise these partnerships by using funding from the SSRP Impact Fund to engage directly with local communities and raise awareness around the potential of urban food production and the importance of pollinators.

After working with the SSRP

A culminating point in Beth’s career consisted of receiving a £1.3 million , which allowed her to establish her own lab at the 5XÉçÇøÊÓƵ to study the foraging choices of bees and their implications for pollination. Besides research, she has worked in a public outreach role with the South Downs Park, engaging underrepresented communities in a heathlands restoration project.

  


 

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