LAIDLAW Research Proposal
The Living Library: Investigating Rewilded Ecosystems as Sources
of Novel Medicinal Compounds
Problem
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Antibiotic resistance is a global crisis; most frontline drugs come from soil microbes, fungi, and plants.
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Biodiversity loss = loss of undiscovered cures.
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Rewilding restores ecosystems, but no one has tested whether it also restores medical discovery potential.
Objectives
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Compare biodiversity of soil microbes/fungi in rewilded vs. degraded ecosystems.
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Screen isolates for antimicrobial activity/hit rate.
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Test whether habitat complexity (litter depth, canopy cover, coarse woody debris) predicts activity.
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Translate findings into policy and community engagement, reframing rewilding as health infrastructure.
Methods & Timeline (6 weeks)
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Sites: 1 rewilded, 1 degraded (10 plots each).
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Weeks 1–2: Field sampling (soils, habitat metrics, fungal vouchers).
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Weeks 2–5: Culture isolates, crude extracts, antimicrobial assays vs. E. coli, S. aureus, P. aeruginosa.
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Weeks 5–6: Analyze hit rates, habitat links; prepare dataset, policy brief, community presentation.
Significance & Innovation
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Novel: No prior study has connected rewilding to drug discovery pipelines.
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Timely: Rewilding is a young movement; affordable bioassays now make this feasible.
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Impact: Provides proof-of-concept data showing restoration can revive ecosystems as “living libraries” of chemical diversity.
Leadership & Impact
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Policy Briefs: Accessible summary for conservation & public health partners.
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Community Engagement: Presentation to land trusts and student groups.
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Peer Mentorship: Involve fellow students in interdisciplinary field and lab work.
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Narrative Shift: From rewilding = “saving nature” to rewilding = “saving cures.”
Expected Outcomes
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Scientific: Evidence of higher bioactivity in rewilded soils.
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Practical: Ranked list of bioactive isolates and dataset.
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Societal: New argument for restoration funding tied to public health.
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Personal: Growth as an interdisciplinary leader.
Closing Statement
This project reframes rewilding as a driver of medical innovation. By testing whether restored ecosystems yield higher antimicrobial activity than degraded ones, I will generate pilot data at the frontier of ecology and medicine. Through policy briefs, community engagement, and peer leadership, I aim to show that rewilding protects not just biodiversity, but the cures of tomorrow.