The big picture: using wildflower strips for pest control
Rothamsted Research have appointed Professor Angela Karp as the Institute’s new Director and CEO.
Professor Karp had been acting as interim director since December last year, in addition to her role as director for Science Innovation, Engagement and Partnerships. She is the first female director of the Institute since it was founded in 1843.
“I feel very excited, and hugely proud, to be taking up this role at a time when agriculture is undergoing such significant transformation,” said Professor Karp.
“It is a time of great opportunities, but also of considerable challenges, as farmers strive to identify the most resilient, viable and sustainable routes to providing nutritious, healthy food whilst also enhancing and protecting the environment.
“With its world class resources, breadth and depth of knowledge of agricultural systems, ability to engage across the sector and 177 year old brand, Rothamsted Research is in a unique position to make significant contributions through agricultural science and innovation, whilst also providing independent evidence-based analysis and advice to society.”
With more than 35 years’ experience in crop genetics and breeding for food and bio-renewables, Professor Karp has more than 130 refereed publications, co-authored a textbook on genetics, and is co-editor of books on genetics and bioenergy.
In 2007, she received the Royal Agricultural Society of England Research Medal and, in 2008, the Alfred-Toepfer Prize for her research achievements.
More recently she has led the institute’s overall strategy on external engagement and partnerships. This included developing new mechanisms for collaborative innovation, including a new accelerator initiative (AgRIA) to co-develop agri-food solutions with businesses and the climate change investment programme SHAKE.
“I look forward to working with everyone at Rothamsted, and our partners in institutes and universities, as well as in the private sector, to ensure Rothamsted Research continues to play a leading role in developing impactful solutions to the challenges facing agriculture now, and in the years ahead,” she said
Rothamsted Research is core-funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council, part of UK Research and Innovation, and works in partnership with the Lawes Agricultural Trust which owns the estates at Harpenden and Broom's Barn, and supports Rothamsted Research's national and international agricultural scientific research through the provision of land, facilities and funding.
The Institute also runs the North Wyke Farm Platform in Devon which focusses on research into livestock systems.
Chair of the Rothamsted Research Board, Sir John Beddington. said: “This was a unanimous decision by the Board, and we are absolutely delighted that Angela is taking up the role permanently.
“Her leadership during the last few months, including her effective handling of the Covid crisis, has been outstanding. We look forward to working with her to move Rothamsted into the exciting next chapter of its illustrious history.”
Rothamsted Research is the oldest agricultural research institute in the world, working from gene to field with a proud history of ground-breaking discoveries, from crop treatment to crop protection, from statistical interpretation to soils management.
The Institute’s Victorian founders, Sir John Lawes and Sir Joseph Gilbert, were the pioneers of modern agriculture, and we are known for imaginative science and our collaborative influence on fresh thinking and farming practices.
In terms of the Institute’s economic contribution, the cumulative impact of its work in the UK was calculated in 2015 to exceed £3 billion a year.
Rothamsted Research is the longest-running agricultural research institute in the world. We work from gene to field with a proud history of ground-breaking
discoveries in areas as diverse as crop management, statistical interpretation and soil health. Our founders, in 1843, were the pioneers of modern
agriculture, and we are known for our imaginative science and our collaborative approach to developing innovative farm practice.
Through independent research, we make significant contributions to improving agri-food systems in the UK and internationally, with
economic impact estimated to exceed £3 bn in annual contribution to the UK economy. Our strength lies in our systems approach, which combines strategic research,
interdisciplinary teams and multiple partnerships.
Rothamsted is home to three unique National Bioscience Research Infrastructures which are open to researchers from all over the world:
The Long-Term Experiments,
Rothamsted Insect Survey and the
North Wyke Farm Platform.
We are strategically funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), with additional support from other national and
international funding streams, and from industry. We are also supported by the Lawes Agricultural Trust (LAT).
The Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council is part of UK Research and Innovation, a non-departmental public body funded by a grant-in-aid
from the UK government.
BBSRC invests to push back the frontiers of biology and deliver a healthy, prosperous and sustainable future. Through our investments, we build and support a vibrant,
dynamic and inclusive community which delivers ground-breaking discoveries and develops bio-based solutions that contribute to tackling global challenges,
such as sustainable food production, climate change, and healthy ageing.
As part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), we not only play a pivotal role in fostering connections that enable the UK’s world-class research and innovation system
to flourish – we also have a responsibility to enable the creation of a research culture that is diverse, resilient, and engaged.
BBSRC proudly forges interdisciplinary collaborations where excellent bioscience has a fundamental role. We pioneer approaches that enhance the equality, diversity,
and inclusion of talent by investing in people, infrastructure, technologies, and partnerships on a global scale.
The Lawes Agricultural Trust, established in 1889 by Sir John Bennet Lawes, supports Rothamsted Research’s national and international agricultural science through the provision of land, facilities and funding. LAT, a charitable trust, owns the estates at Harpenden and Broom's Barn, including many of the buildings used by Rothamsted Research. LAT provides an annual research grant to the Director, accommodation for nearly 200 people, and support for fellowships for young scientists from developing countries. LAT also makes capital grants to help modernise facilities at Rothamsted, or invests in new buildings.