Micro fibres in our natural world

Nature’s Stories

Micro fibres are produced by plants and animals every day: nature has ways of dealing with them.

We produce micro fibres on wash days; these micro fibres pollute our oceans, our land and our food.

Can we learn how to deal with them?

Threats to the Atlantic Puffin

The Atlantic Puffin has been given vulnerable status by the IUCN* due to a rapid decline in global populations in the past 30 years.

This attracted my attention, as an artist and scientist, inspiring me to create a series of Artworks to explore this theme more deeply.

What are the critical factors endangering puffins from both sides of the Atlantic?

* (IUCN International Union Conservation of Nature)

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An edited scene with a washing machine with a bird's face inside, being fed wires from a laundry line connected to a box labeled "My Crow Fibers" holding three young birds. A pink shirt with a bird's face hangs on the laundry line, with a sunset background over a body of water.
Artwork depicting a puffin flying above a cardboard box labeled "The Atlantic Puffin" and "IUCN threatened species," with a distressed puffin lying inside the box.