The Ecology Studio shares its work through a range of publications, combining field observation, botanical illustration, essays, and long-form conversations.
These publications document the studio’s evolving research in ethnobotany, ecological learning, and cultural relationships with forests. Some materials are freely available to the public, while extended research and curriculum development continue within the studio research circle.
Mycapod is the studio’s field conversation series.
Episodes explore ecological thinking, forest observation, and cultural approaches to living with landscapes. Conversations often emerge directly from the studio’s ethnobotanical research and field journaling process. Each episode introduces ideas and questions that are explored further through the Ethnobotanical Journal and studio learning materials.
The Ethnobotanical Journal documents the studio’s botanical observations through field notes, sketches, and written reflections.
The journal focuses on learning directly from plants and forest ecosystems, beginning with foundational species such as mosses, soil communities, and understory plants. These studies combine artistic documentation with ecological observation to develop a slower, attentive approach to studying plant life.
Selected excerpts are shared publicly, while extended journal materials are available through the Ecology Studio research circle on Patreon:
Longer written work exploring ecological civilisation, ethnobotany, and cultural ecology is published through academic platforms.
These essays contribute to the broader conversation around ecological learning, regenerative culture, and interdisciplinary environmental research.
Alongside formal research, the studio also develops creative works that explore the imaginative relationship between people and plants.
Illustrated books, botanical art prints, and storytelling projects help translate ecological ideas into accessible cultural forms.
These works are available through the studio’s independent channel on:
Together, these activities form an evolving record of the studio’s work in observing forests, studying plants, and cultivating ecological intelligence.