Contact Professor Jacqueline Hannam
- Tel: +44 (0) 1234 754586
- Email: j.a.hannam@cranfield.ac.uk
- Twitter:
Areas of expertise
- Digital Agriculture
- Monitoring and Environmental Informatics
- Natural Capital
- Soil
- Soil Resources
- Sustainable Land Systems
Background
Jack currently leads the Soil Informatics group and the LandIS team at ߣߣÊÓƵ, who are responsible for the national soil data for England and Wales . She is President of the British Society of Soil Science (BSSS).
Jack's research on land use decisions is focused on soil data, soil health and soil policy. Her work in soil data and modelling fuses novel machine learning approaches with expert and local knowledge to develop new predictions of soil properties at national scales. She is interested in how different forms of soil data (e.g. spectroscopy or citizen-sourced data) can be used to inform local sustainable soil management and also feed into national monitoring schemes. Work on predictive mapping of land capability identified how climate change could affect the national capability of land for agriculture. The outputs have been used for decision making by the Welsh Government and Defra in national and local policies. Her work on soil health has developed proof-of-concept soil health indicators for government and land owners. She works closely with farmers and growers to implement regenerative agriculture for better soil health outcomes. Her policy-relevant research sees her working collaboratively with policymakers, bringing evidence directly into land use and soil policy design and implementation. She completed an 24 month secondment (2021-2023) in Welsh Government Soil Policy Team developing a new soil policy for Wales. She is a panel member for NERC.
She is a passionate science communicator and has been interviewed on BBC Countryfile, BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Sky News and BBC World. She founded Soapbox Science in Milton Keynes in 2015, a public outreach platform promoting women in science. She is a member of ߣߣÊÓƵ's Community and Public Engagement working group and the School of Water Energy and Environment, Equality, Diversity and Inclusion group.
Research opportunities
I am interested in supervising PhD students in the following areas: land use decisions for net zero; soil data, modelling and mapping; soil health; soil policy; regenerative agriculture; urban soil systems; transdisciplinary soil science (social science/art interface).
Previous PhD researchers:
Tom Storr
Grant Campbell
Timo Breure
Current activities
Soil and land use for NetZero
Land Use for Net Zero Hub (LUNZHub) England national team co-lead with Mike Morecroft at Natural England. Member of the Soil Health and carbon dynamics and Digital Transformations Topic Advisory Groups (UKRI, Defra, DESNZ, Scottish Government)
Land-Climate Research Programme: Scenarios and Pathways to Net Zero. Expert panel member (DESNZ)
Self-learning digital twins for sustainable land management. Project advisory board member (EPSRC AI for Net Zero) .
Soil data and land use decision modelling
Developing Bayesian approaches for soil property estimation at national scales (LandIS).
EU project to develop regional-scale harmonised soil data for the Danube Basin (Joint Research Centre with ISRIC).
Updated map of peat soils in Wales providing new estimates of soil carbon stock and GHG emissions (Welsh Government).
Land capability approaches applied in an ESRC project to determine how soil functions are impacted by land use change resulting from food and nutrition scenarios emerging from the UK response to COVID-19 and Brexit (ESRC ES/V004433/1).
Predictive Agricultural Land Classification in Wales (Welsh Government)
Soil health and regenerative agriculture
Developing indicators for soil health in England (JNCC/Defra)
David Clarke (PhD researcher NERC Centa2 DTP) is developing novel analytics frameworks that capitalise on-farm data to identify site-season interactions in soil and crop for sustainable intensification (with NIAB and BGS).
Harriet Gold (PhD researcher BBSRC FoodBioSystems DTP) is designing UK agricultural landscapes by developing mechanistic landscape-scale models for several terrestrial invertebrates to predict agroecosystem resilience (with University of Reading and Syngenta).
Naomi Paine (PhD researcher BBSRC FoodBioSystems DTP) is exploring the mechanisms of soil carbon stability under multiple regenerative agricuture practices (with University of Reading and Nottingham University).
Soil Policy
Co-produced a new Soil Policy Statement for Wales during 24 month secondment (2021-2023) in the Welsh Government Soil Policy Team supported by a team of PhD Policy Placements (Carmen Sanchez Garcia, Erik Button, Beth Roberts, Danielle Hunt, Nicola Wynn). She continues to work with the team to finalize the Soil Policy statement and associated work.
Co-authored an extensive synthesis of evidence (and digestible executive summary of the main findings) that forms the basis of the draft soil policy statement
Our researcher experiences developing soil policy that works in practice was based on effective partnerships and co-production between policy makers, researchers and key stakeholders. We presented our novel approaches at the first Soil Policy day at the World Congress of Soil Science in 2022.
Art/Science interface
Jack is a member of the Centre for Art and Ecology at Goldsmiths. She contributed to a NERC Creative Climate Connections project 'Sensing Soil' working with Dr Ros Gray and artist Harun Morrison in the Goldsmiths Art and Research Garden and participants from Lewisham Refugee and Migrant Network on the climate and cultural connections of soil in urban environments.
She also hosts artists Sarah Strachan at the National Soil Archive at ߣߣÊÓƵ who are using the resources as research in art practice.
Clients
NERC
ESRC
Innovate UK
Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European Commission
Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)
Welsh Government
Scottish Government
Forestry Commission
Environment Agency
JNCC
Gs Growers
Dstl
Cobham Antenna Systems