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Transcript of The Incredible Life of the Beijing Swift: Terry Townshend

Here is the full transcript of Beijing-based biodiversity and climate change expert Terry Townshend’s talk titled “The Incredible Life of the Beijing Swift” at TEDxShanghai 2025 conference.

TERRY TOWNSHEND: Hello, everyone. Today, I’m going to talk to you about the relationship between humans and nature. And I start with this very famous photograph known as Earthrise. It was taken on December 24, 1968, by the astronauts aboard the Apollo 8 mission as they were orbiting the moon. It was the first time that we could see our beautiful blue planet and how vulnerable it is in the vast darkness of space.

The Devastating Loss of Wildlife

The reason I start with this photograph is that since that image was taken, humans have devastated the wildlife on earth. In the last fifty years, the populations of vertebrates—mammals, birds, reptiles—have fallen by an average of 69%. It’s estimated that about 90% of the large fish have disappeared from the oceans. And the extinction rate, that is species that we lose forever, is thought to be at least a thousand times the natural rate. A student at one of the schools I visited created a graph, which I think shows very well the trajectory that we are on.

If we continue on this pathway, we face a future where we could lose as many as 50% of all species by February. I grew up in a very small village by the sea in England. And I was captivated by nature since the age of four. So when I heard statistics like this, I was heartbroken and I wanted to do something to help. So the first thing that I did was try to understand why we’re losing our nature so fast.

Of course, one of the main reasons is we have a rapidly growing human population.