What do you want to understand?
Living Systems Intelligence connects living systems, human systems, threats, solutions, evidence, decisions and learning. Start with a question — each one opens a real pathway through the system. No account, nothing personalised; just a clearer way in.
Understand a species
Follow a single living thing from what it does ecologically to the human systems it touches.
Understand an ecosystem
See how a living system provides services that reach far beyond its own boundary.
Understand what threatens it
Trace the pressures acting on a species or ecosystem, and how they cascade.
Understand what can help
See which solution pathways may strengthen a service or reduce a threat — and under what conditions.
Understand the evidence
Inspect the sources, confidence, verification status and data gaps behind the claims.
Understand what was learned
See where expectations met observations, and whether confidence should change.
Use this for a decision
Read a structured decision signal: leverage, urgency, evidence, uncertainty and difficulty.
Each follows one living system from what it does to what a decision would need to consider — structured reasoning, not an automated engine.
Amazon — a guided pathway
One human-readable route from a living system to a decision context.
- EcosystemAmazon rainforest
- ServiceRainfall regulation
- Human systemAgriculture & water systems
- DecisionDecision signal
- EvidenceEvidence & data quality
- LearningLearning record
The Amazon case shows that forest protection is not only about biodiversity. It is also connected to rainfall, water, agriculture, climate stability and human systems.
A guided proof pathway for this case — structured reasoning, not an automated decision engine.
Pollination — a guided pathway
How a small species connects to the food system, with its real limits.
- SpeciesWestern honey bee
- FunctionPollination
- ServiceFood production
- DecisionDecision signal
- EvidenceEvidence & data quality
- LearningLearning record
The pollination case shows how a small species can connect to food systems — but also why dependency varies by crop, region and pollinator group. Honey bees are one important pollinator among many.
A guided proof pathway for this case — structured reasoning, not an automated decision engine.
Understand why a species matters by following it from ecological function to human system.
Start with the honey bee →Find evidence-aware context — with sources and confidence — before writing about an issue.
Open Trust →See which human systems are affected by ecosystem change, and what should be considered.
Open the Amazon case →Use solution pathways, decision signals and data quality to see where support may matter and where evidence gaps remain.
Open decisions →Prioritise missions, partners, impact opportunities and communication based on the intelligence.
Open learning →You do not need to read everything. Pick one question, follow one pathway, and let the connections — not a dashboard — show you why a living system matters.