Deep Seed – Regenerative Agriculture
Biodiversity is not just about saving bees… it’s about saving ourselves!
In this episode, Oliver Dauert joins us to explore why protecting biodiversity is essential to human survival, food security, and climate resilience. From beavers engineering entire wetland ecosystems to soil microbes collaborating with plants, this is your crash course in how nature actually works and how we can rewild it before it’s too late.
Whether you’re a regenerative farmer, climate optimist, soil geek, or just looking to reconnect with nature, this conversation will rewild your thinking and get you excited about what’s still possible.
🌍 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:
What biodiversity really means (and why it’s more than just saving cute animals)
Why beavers are better water engineers than most humans
How wolves are rebalancing European ecosystems — and freaking out farmers
The untold story of pollinators (spoiler: it’s not just bees)
Why farmers can (and must) be biodiversity’s best allies
How regenerative agriculture and rewilding can work together, not against each other
🔧 Actionable Takeaways:
The easiest way anyone can reconnect with the living world in just 5 minutes
How farmers can boost yields and biodiversity at the same time
Why building wildlife corridors between farms is key to ecosystem restoration
The real reason biodiversity loss is invisible — and how to see clearly again
💚 Subscribe to Deep Seed for weekly insights into regenerative agriculture, agroecology, rewilding, ecosystem restoration, and the seeds of a more abundant future.
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This episode was produced in partnership with Soil Capital, a company that supports #regenerativeagriculture by financially rewarding farmers who improve soil health & biodiversity.
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🔗 Useful Links:
Soil Capital - accelerating regenerative agriculture
🎥 Documentaries:
Our Planet (Netflix)
Life on Our Planet – David Attenborough
📚 Books:
Rewilding by Cain Blythe
A Life on Our Planet by David Attenborough
Silent Spring by Rachel Carson
📱 Apps:
PlantNet
Merlin Bird ID by Cornell Lab of Ornithology
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