Roberto Cazzolla Gatti


Roberto Cazzolla Gatti is an Italian environmental and evolutionary biologist, and a biodiversity expert, who studies the diversity, behaviour, evolution, and ecology of species on Earth.
He is an Associate Professor and the Head and Scientific Coordinator of the MSc Program in Biodiversity at the Biological Institute of the Tomsk State University, Russia and a Research Fellow of the Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research in Austria.
He also works as a freelance documentary photographer and wildlife filmmaker and coordinates geographic and scientific explorations of some of the most remote places on Earth. In 2019, his documentary-film on the biodiversity of Congo river basin's forests entitled “Ivindo: a journey into the green heart of Africa” was released by the Colibrì Studio Productions.

Education and career

He graduated in 2006 in Biology, defending a thesis in Marine Ecology and in 2008 in Environmental and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Bari, Italy, defending a thesis in Zoology and Anthropology.
He holds a Ph.D. in Forest Ecology earned in 2013 at the University of Tuscia in Viterbo, studying the tropical forests of Africa and their biodiversity. He also holds a II Level master's degree in International Policies and Global Environmental Protection earned in 2009 at the University of Tuscia, defending a thesis on "Africa: biodiversity and climate change". He received a diploma from the School in "Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services" at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Germany with training in Peyresq, Alpes de Haute-Provence, France.
He served for many years as a scientific advisor for the World Wildlife Fund Italy and the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations.
As a post-doc, he conducted research studies in tropical ecology and biodiversity at the Impacts on Agriculture, Forestry and Natural Terrestrial Ecosystems Division of the Euro-Mediterranean Centre for Climate Change -University of Tuscia. Then, he joined the Research Consortium "Digamma" to develop a stereoscopic system called "Tredimed" designed for teaching surgical 3D to students graduating in medicine.
In 2018-2019, he was also a Research Associate at the Forest Advanced Computing & Artificial Intelligence Lab and Coordinator of the Global Forest Biodiversity Initiative Hub, Department of Forestry and Natural Resources of the Purdue University, USA and a Visiting Professor at the University of Beijing to teach a class in Biodiversity.
At the beginning of 2020, he earned a Research Fellowship at the prestigious Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research in Austria.
He is currently a member of the CEM, the SSC and the WCPA of the IUCN.

Research and works

Besides his empirical studies, he is best known for arguing that biodiversity is an autocatalytic ecological and evolutionary process and for providing evidence of non-primate animal self-awareness.
He proposed that "life begets life" and that the diversity of species on Earth is generating itself by niche emergence.
He also suggested several novel hypotheses and theories in ecology and evolution such as the endogenosymbiotic origin of biodiversity, the canopy height-biodiversity relationship , the coexistence of species through the "avoidance of competition", and the fractal nature of the latitudinal biodiversity gradient.
He strongly advocates against considering competition as the main driver of evolution and endorses a reconsideration of the importance of cooperative/mutualistic relationships to explain the existence of biological diversity. In 2011, he proposed the "Biodiversity-related Niches Differentiation Theory " in which he argued that the number of niches in an ecosystem depends on the number of species present in a particular moment and that the species themselves allow the enhancement of niches in terms of space and number. He found that using a three-dimensional model as an ecological hypervolume and testing the theory on different ecosystems it is possible to demonstrate that each species plays a fundamental role in facilitating the colonization by other species by simply modifying the environment and exponentially increasing the available niches. The BNDT stresses the evidence that the process of niche differentiation is strictly addressed by species. This approach has various consequences, first in the reconsideration of the patterns of species coexistence and second in terms of a better understanding of the actual importance of cooperation and competition in the evolution of biological diversity.
In 2013, he wrote the novel-essay "The paradox of civilization". The book is inspired by his journeys in tropical areas, the encounters with African Pygmies and the life in the wild and narrates the abuses of civilised societies over the environment and indigenous people.
In 2018, in a paper entitled “Is Gaia alive? The future of a symbiotic planet” – published in the scientific journal “Futures” – he described different situations according to which “Gaia”, our Earth, would be able to reproduce and to transfer her planetary genome to other uninhabited or inhabited planets. Prof. Cazzolla Gatti argued that our species could act as a germinal cell carrying a specific planetary genome, but it is unlikely for Homo sapiens sapiens to reproduce on another Gaian system. In what is considered a breakthrough in astrobiology, the Italian scientist hypothesised that human beings will reproduce Earth’s biosphere in the universe. However - he said - as a spermatozoon, which loses its flagellum and acrosome while entering into the egg of another body, therefore changing its identity, a human being can be considered just as a carrier of its body’s genetic information, not of himself: a means more than an aim.
In December 2018, he led a study that shows how the sustainability certifications of palm oil are not reducing deforestation in Southeast Asia and this could represent a catastrophe for the biodiversity of this region.

Books and monographs