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  • I have a challenge for you.

  • The next time you're stuck in traffic,

  • take a minute to take a look at the sea of cars around you.

  • How many car companies do you think you could recognize?

  • I'm not even really into cars,

  • but I think I'd do fairly well.

  • But then look beyond the cars

  • to the trees that line the side of the road.

  • How many of those could you identify?

  • Probably not as many, right?

  • Year upon year,

  • we grow further and further away from nature

  • to the point where we have to question:

  • What experience of nature will the next generation have?

  • And if that generation lacks a sort of emotional connection

  • with their surroundings,

  • then will they bother to fight and save it

  • when we need it most?

  • My name is Nirupa Rao, and I'm a botanical artist.

  • In short, that means I paint plants,

  • usually with watercolor,

  • in a way that aims to be not only aesthetically appealing

  • but also scientifically accurate.

  • And I'm well aware that this is quite an odd profession

  • for a 21st-century urban Indian --

  • some might say outdated in the age of the camera --

  • but here's how my journey began.

  • A few years ago,

  • I met two naturalists who work with the Nature Conservation Foundation:

  • Divya Mudappa and T.R. Shankar Raman.

  • And now interestingly,

  • they actually began their careers working with animals,

  • but they soon came to realize

  • that if they were to protect those animals,

  • they'd also have to protect their habitats --

  • that is, the trees they live off.

  • And so they started a rainforest restoration program

  • aimed at growing local trees that local birds and animals rely on.

  • And they were looking to visually document them in some way,

  • but the photographers they approached came up empty-handed.

  • These trees were up to 140 feet tall.

  • That's 26 times my height.

  • Try capturing giants like that in a single camera frame.

  • Besides, the surrounding greenery was just too dense

  • to clearly isolate a single tree.

  • And so together, we decided to give good old painting a shot.

  • And to tell you the truth,

  • even when I was standing there right in front of them,

  • it was difficult to see the entire tree.

  • So instead I'd study the buttress up close

  • and then climb up the hill to see its crown rising above the canopy.

  • And then with Divya, and she there as aide,

  • we could piece these pieces of the puzzle together

  • into the final painting.

  • For a lot of people who don't know the jungles

  • as well as these naturalists,

  • these paintings are the only way that they'll get to see these trees

  • in their entirety.

  • We were able to document 30 of the region's most iconic species

  • along with their fruit, flowers, seeds and leaves.

  • (Applause)

  • Through this process,

  • the jungles really came alive to me.

  • They morphed from this undifferentiated sea of green

  • into individual species with individual characters.

  • And I think a lot of people just tend to see plants as background scenery,

  • assuming that their immobility makes them uninteresting.

  • But I began to see that it is that very rootedness that makes them fascinating,

  • the ingenious ways in which they adapt and respond

  • to threats and opportunities

  • on timescales that make our heads hurt to imagine.

  • And I couldn't help but wonder:

  • What if I could tell their stories,

  • showcase their complexity?

  • Perhaps we'd all start to think of plants a little differently.

  • And in fact, in my family, plants have always been a source of fascination.

  • My grand-uncle, Father Cecil Saldanha,

  • was the first to document the flora of our home state of Karnataka

  • back in the '60s.

  • And my mother has all of these memories

  • of being a little girl watching this entire enterprise unfold.

  • And consequently,

  • I've come to associate plants with adventure and discovery

  • and excitement.

  • And so I knew I didn't just want to paint roses and sunflowers.

  • I wanted to paint the kinds of plants that botanists like my uncle work with.

  • And so I set out to create a book,

  • supported by the National Geographic Society,

  • on the weirdest, wackiest plants we could find

  • in one of the most biodiverse regions in the world:

  • India's very own Western Ghats.

  • (Applause)

  • Take a look at these fantastic jewel-like sundews.

  • They grow in regions where nutrient content in the soil is poor,

  • and so they have a little way of supplementing their diets.

  • They lure, trap and ingest insects using mucilaginous glands on their leaves.

  • The little insects are attracted to the sweet secretions,

  • but once they come in contact,

  • they are ensnared and the game is up.

  • And you might notice

  • that the sundews very cleverly hold their flowers on tall, thin stems

  • high above their murderous leaves

  • to avoid trapping potential pollinators.

  • Further inside the jungle,

  • you might meet the strangler fig.

  • It grows in areas where sunlight is scant

  • and competition is intense.

  • And so it has a strategy to sort of cut in line and get ahead.

  • You see, its seeds are dispersed by birds

  • that drop them atop the branches of existing trees.

  • And that little seed will start to germinate from there,

  • sending its shoots upward to the sky

  • and its roots all the way down to the ground,

  • all the while strangling the host tree, often to death.

  • And even if that host tree dies and rots away,

  • the strangler will persist

  • as a hollowed-out column of roots and branches.

  • And if that didn't impress you,

  • let me show you one of my personal favorites:

  • the Neelakurinji.

  • When it blossoms,

  • it does so in unison,

  • covering entire hillsides in carpets of blue.

  • This is its pollination strategy known as "gregarious flowering,"

  • in which it invests all of its resources into a single, spectacular event

  • aimed at attracting pollinators to the feast --

  • which is easily done,

  • considering the Neelakurinji is all that can be seen for miles around.

  • But here's the catch:

  • it happens only once every 12 years.

  • (Applause)

  • And soon after seeding,

  • these flowers will die,

  • not to be seen again for the next 12 years.

  • This is our way of telling a story of the Western Ghats:

  • through plants and through their ecosystems

  • and the various ways in which they interact

  • with players in their habitats.

  • It's glorious, isn't it?

  • But the way things are going,

  • we can't be sure that the Neelakurinji will come out to play again

  • in the next 12 years.

  • The further and further we grow from nature,

  • the more we are almost literally blind to it

  • and the effects that our activities have on it.

  • And that's what it's called -- "plant blindness":

  • the increasing inability to really register the plants around us

  • as living beings.

  • The two scientists that coined this term,

  • Elisabeth Schussler and James Wandersee,

  • contend that plants lack certain visual cues.

  • They don't have faces,

  • they don't move,

  • and we don't perceive them as threats.

  • And so with the increasing onslaught of information that our eyes receive,

  • we just deprioritize registering plants,

  • simply filtering out information that we view as extraneous.

  • But stop to think about that.

  • Are plants really extra?

  • Are they just nature's backdrop?

  • Or are they the fundamental building blocks

  • upon which all life is based,

  • the starting points of our ecosystems

  • and the reason why earth is sustainable for life to this day?

  • I leave you with these images from a program called "Wild Shaale,"

  • which in Kannada means "wild school."

  • It's run by a conservationist, Krithi Karanth.

  • And her team turned some of my illustrations

  • into games that village children could play with and learn from.

  • And I can tell you they were so excited to see plants that they recognized --

  • the trees that the monkeys play on,

  • the flowers they use at their harvest festival,

  • the fruit they use to wash their hair.

  • And it's that sort of familiarity which, when celebrated,

  • turns to love,

  • which then turns into an urge to protect.

  • It's really time we open our eyes to the world around us,

  • to this entire kingdom that's hidden in plain sight.

  • And so the next time you're stuck in traffic,

  • you know what to do.

  • (Applause)

I have a challenge for you.

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