Keep your head above the water

It is winter time in Belgium, and winter time means water!

High water in meadow

Belgium is kinda famous for its bad weather, with 800 mm average annual precipitation evenly spread over all months of the year.

Fence in flooded meadow

This 800 mm is in no way comparable with the liters of rainfall in a tropical rainforest, but it is enough to play an important role in the functioning of the local ecosystems.

Didge and flooded meadow

Especially in winter, these rains might cause serious stresses for the vegetation. With the cold weather and the short daylight periods during the winter months, the vegetation is inactive and hence unable to fix a problem that would be solved within a day in summer. This inactivity and hibernation indeed means only limited evapotranspiration or water loss through the leaves, and as a consequence restricted water uptake by roots from the soils.

Knotted willows in flooded field

Combined with the lower transpiration levels of the soil in the cold winter months, our landscape soon accumulates excessive water in (and on) the soils.

Frozen flooded corn field

For those out in the Belgian fields these days, the impact is obvious. Everywhere you look, meadows and forests are flooded, and the high water levels are persistent over the weeks. For meadow plants trying to survive the winter, these continuous floods will not provide the best environment, placing water stress close to the top of the list of plant stressors in the struggle to survive.

  High water in forest

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Invasive plants reaching new elevations

With humans traveling and occupying the world more intensively every day, invasions by nonnative plant species are becoming an omnipresent pattern. People transport countless plant seeds as they travel that might, or might not, establish and disrupt local ecosystems.

Until recently, remote places in the alpine and sub(ant)arctic world were considered safe from these plant invasions. It was generally accepted that climate conditions where too harsh to allow the survival of species that weren’t cold-adapted.

This fairly optimistic statement has been refuted by several recent observational studies that listed an ever growing group of nonnative species, steadily marching uphill and towards the poles.

Mountain roads serve as vectors for invading plants.

Mountain roads serve as vectors for invading plants.

A very important factor is that their invasion is facilitated by us humans as we build roads, railways, walking trails, and several other forms of disturbances that are known to be the perfect vectors for plant invasions.

Invasive broom along the shore of a Patagonian mountain lake.

Invasive broom along the shore of a Patagonian mountain lake.

The South American continent hosts some of the world’s most precious mountain regions, but it is also a continent with severely advanced levels of plant invasions. Fast action is needed to preserve the untouched beauty of these areas.

Non-native white clover, introduced by Europeans

Non-native white clover, introduced by Europeans

But there is a problem. A large part of the information on plant invasions comes from lowland environments in the heavily studied Western world. Invasive species might however react completely different to the conditions on high elevations. Disturbance might be the big promotor of invasion in the lowlands, but the effect can as easily be the complete opposite at the highest peaks. We don’t know. How many other factors is this the case for?

Poplar invasion in the Patagonian Andes

Poplar invasion in the Patagonian Andes

It is our goal to disentangle these factors. We are on a hunt for the differences between lowland and highland invasions, a hunt that should ultimately result in reliable predictions for the future of invasions in the mountains. Focussing on South America will add valuable and highly lacking information on the processes of plant invasion on the Southern Hemisphere to the story.

With a team of plant ecologists from all over the world, we are trying to synthesize the knowledge about mountain plant invasions to come up with good strategies to prevent the further spread of potentially dangerous species.

It might not be too late, but the clock is ticking…

Fieldwork overlooking Punta Arenas in southern Chile.

Fieldwork overlooking Punta Arenas in southern Chile.

This post was originally posted on www.latinamericanscience.org after a question of their redaction to blog about our research plans in South America. 

There even exists a Spanish version of the post, which got serious Twitter coverage on the Southern Hemisphere!! Very excited about that!

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The sparrow is first

For those who liked the cute house sparrows of last week, I have some news! The house sparrow is (for the second year in a row already) back as the most abundant bird species in Belgian gardens.

House sparrow in bird house

This ‘first place’ does however not necessarily relate to an upward trend in their absolute numbers. It is more likely that other species, like the finch and the great tit, do not visit our gardens that often when winters are mild and they are not running out of other food sources in the forests.

More details on the exact numbers are not available yet, as you can still submit your own counts here.

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Count the birds

This weekend will bring Belgium its yearly ‘bird counters weekend’! This event is one of the best examples of citizen science in the country, as every person with a garden can participate. You just have to spend half an hour in the weekend counting the birds that come and visit the garden.

Female house sparrow

With a little help of bird feeders, these visits can be fairly spectacular with impressive diversity. Natuurpunt, our main organisation for nature conservation, collects the data from all these gardens over the whole country and uses them to follow the patterns of our garden birds over the years.

Male house sparrow

For my Belgium readers, this post can serve as a little reminder to put out some food and keep an eye on the window for a while this weekend.

Feeding house sparrows out of hand

The non-Belgians can just enjoy these pictures of house sparrows enjoying delicious bread crumbs. Year after year, the house sparrow turned out to be the most common garden bird, but unfortunately, numbers are declining steadily lately.

Feeding house sparrows

It had to give its gardenbird-crown to the finch and the great tit, but I hope for upward trends one day that bring back these cute fellows to our gardens!

 Female house sparrow Male house sparrow

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Uphill (and downhill!)

Our climate is changing, that much is clear. The main effect of this changing climate is that what once was balancing now starts shifting. As if our little world became a plate full of beer pulls, losing its balance on the shaking hands of an inexperienced innkeeper. One of the most obvious effects of climate change on plant and animal life is visualised in the shifting geographical ranges of many  species.

Scientists have been hunting for these range shifts for years, resulting in a growing pile of scientific papers on the matter. Case after case, the hypothesis is clear: the climate is warming, so species will follow the track of these increasing temperatures: uphill and to higher latitudes, towards the arctic and alpine world. Indeed, more and more longterm experiments and observations bring exactly those patterns to light. These results are accompanied by the worrying message that the original inhabitants species of the invaded cold environments themselves don’t have anywhere to go.

Invasive plants like this chamomile in the Chilean Andes hike surprisingly fast uphill.

Invasive plants like this chamomile in the Chilean Andes hike surprisingly fast uphill.

As the proof of this invasion of heat-loving species adds up and the risk for the alpine and arctic vegetation becomes more apparent, it is easy to forget that some species might act opposite of our expectations. An important amount of species indeed seems to hurry uphill, but an as important (albeit smaller) group in the meantime moves downwards, against all odds.

On a steep slope, going downhill might just be a lot easier than going up.

On a steep slope, going downhill might just be a lot easier than going up.

For years, this lasts group has been pushed aside as a mere statistical side effect, nothing more than noise on the data, the inevitable variance around a positive average. Concluding as such however ignores the importance of this group of species. Climate change includes more effects than only this warming trend. Not only temperatures change, but the climatic water balance undergoes drastic alterations as well. In several dry areas, precipitation patterns might even be more influential than the warming effect. In that case, those changing precipitation levels can unexpectedly push species downhill, in a hunt for similar climatic conditions.

In the mountains, water often plays an as important role as temperature.

In the mountains, water often plays an as important role as temperature.

There are alternative explanations for these patterns as well. A lot of species are for example not limited by the climate at the warm side of their distribution. They only taste defeat due to competition with faster growing species. As a result of the changing climate, however, those competitive dominances start shifting, which creates new opportunities at these lower range edges.

Many mountain plants have a large dispersal potential, as they can rely on the omnipresent winds.

Many mountain plants have a large dispersal potential, as they can rely on the omnipresent winds.

Bottom-line is that most effects in ecology might and will be in different directions at once. As a scientist, it is important to keep this in mind and give the unexpected minority the attention it deserves. I stumbled on this story when I was looking at the expected distribution shifts of invasive species in the mountains. The lesson is clear: better not forget to look downhill once!

DSC_0382

I hope to bring you more on that matter as soon as some more stories make it through the review process.

Two relevant reads:

Crimmins, S. M., Dobrowski, S. Z., Greenberg, J. A., Abatzoglou, J. T. & Mynsberge, A. R. (2011) Changes in Climatic Water Balance Drive Downhill Shifts in Plant Species’ Optimum Elevations. Science, 331, 324-327.

Lenoir, J., Gegout, J.-C., Guisan, A., Vittoz, P., Wohlgemuth, T., Zimmermann, N. E., Dullinger, S., Pauli, H., Willner, W. & Svenning, J.-C. (2010) Going against the flow: potential mechanisms for unexpected downslope range shifts in a warming climate. Ecography, 33, 295-303.

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The blanket removed

Earlier, I was so positive about the effects of snow on my little plants trying to survive the colds of winter. How the white blanket would protect them against the unbearable frost outside.

The benefits from this free winter protection however seem to be a little limited in my experimental set-ups. Those plants that use the strong positive effects of disturbance to colonise new systems might face some microclimatic problems that do not exist in the established vegetation.

Melting snow in disturbance

It should already have been clear from my earlier posts that the microclimate within disturbed gaps is totally different from elsewhere, but the pictures I managed to take last week show exactly what that means in reality.

Microclimate in gaps

The protective snow blanket disappeared much faster within the gaps than next to it, an observation with some major implications: open environments might be more vulnerable to freezing, but they will also benefit from a longer growing season. Better keep those ideas in mind whenever I think about disturbance in the future!

Little note: these striking differences only occur when snow layers are shallow, off course. In the subarctic, where the biggest part of my research is located, the snowy blanket will most of the time cover everything, regardless of the foundation, wiping out most of the differences.

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