Love Shine-a light…

Visit the gallery of this event on the right of the blog!

China Light Zoo Antwerp spring tree

Cold days, endless dark nights, today with some additional snow and ice… Winter is upon us and it is trying to make us gloomy and depressed.

China Light Zoo Antwerp baby elephant

But I will not let that happen! There is a perfect cure for this darkness, and it is called ‘China Light’.

China Light Zoo Antwerp dragon

The Zoo of Antwerp, which has always been one of my favourite attractions in Belgium, now hosts a true Chinese light festival. In the dark hours of the evening, you can wander through the Zoo’s gardens and enjoy the beautiful animals, flowers, dragons and other Chinese objects.

China Light Zoo Antwerp

There was even a show starring Chinese acrobats and countless hula hoops.

China Light Zoo Antwerp

By importing some Asia to Belgium, they managed to bring back the light in these December months. Those who still have the chance to make it to Antwerp, the event is definitely worth the visit, although it can be pretty busy.

China Light Zoo Antwerp

On a different note: winter is really upon us, and my tiny little seedlings are struggling. Maybe a soft white snow blanket will prevent some from dying!

  China Light Zoo Antwerp

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Merry Christmas!

The holidays are upon us!

Christmas-party thermal camera

My merry microclimate measurement machinery has already gone into party-mode, ready to celebrate the darkest part of the year.

Festive pile of iButton temperature sensors

These microclimatic party-animals are however determined to ignore the grey weather and let the temperatures run high during the holidays!

For myself, I will probably slow down a bit with my work and post a bit more irregularly, but please, stay tuned for more fun in the new year!

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Cats off duty

I think I am just going to be a cat this weekend. Lazy lying around on a comfortable spot and thinking of nothing much. Maybe eating a bit of high-quality meat now and then, who knows.

Cat resting on blue blanket

And I deserve it, that is the least you can say! Not only did I this week finally clear out the story I had been working on for months, but I also managed to make a first break-through for my néxt modelling paper only this friday afternoon!

Cat enjoying the petting

Three summers ago, when I was working on my master thesis in the Norwegian mountains, I noticed peculiar patterns in the distribution of several alpine species along the roads. As it was not my biggest concern at the time, and as I could not find a convenient way to highlight the patterns in my dataset, the observation did not result in any significant conclusions.

Black cat hiding in cooler

But I never forgot about it, and after the submission of my second paper a month ago, I could give this question priority again. And now, this week, finally, the issue got solved! The story is now send out to my supervisors, ready to face some critical reviews, but until these are back, I am just gonna lay down on this soft blue blanket and close my eyes.

Cat sleeping on blue blanket

But only after I yawned away that freshly catched little bird. Enjoy your weekend!

Spanish feral cat

Well-deserved cat-massage

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To the test

Remember my magical measuring devices for logging soil temperature over long time periods? Remember how excited I was about how cheap, practical, strong and easy to use they are?

iButtons, endless rows of iButtons!

iButtons, endless rows of iButtons!

I still am as excited, but I was however pondering about a few little concerns. As these tiny temperature sensors were originally designed to insure the cold chain of cooled food products in the food industry, they are not perfectly adapted for life in the soil. Their main limitation is their seal, which is not a hundred percent waterproof. This means they need some protection to survive the harsh times below the soil surface.

iButtons with different protection methods

I now already have a lot of experience with iButtons within a little rain coat (as displayed in the picture), and one by one they safely delivered their valuable data. Success ratio: 96 %. This thanks to the combined powers of parafilm and a little ziplock plastic bag.

The iButtons have to help me discover the effect of such slopes on mountain plant life.

The iButtons have to help me discover the effect of such slopes on mountain plant life.

Protection works perfectly, that should be clear, but there is one remaining issue: how big is the effect of this packaging on the measured temperature? Layers of packed air and protective foil dampen the temperature measurements, buffering the peaks .

Left - no protection, right - protection Black: no protection, dark orange: parafilm, licht orange: parafilm + ziploc bag.

Left – no protection, right – protection
Black: no protection, dark orange: parafilm, licht orange: parafilm + ziploc bag.

So I performed a tiny test to measure the effect of our protective coat. First, as a control treatment, I put three iButtons in a cooler without any protection, to see if they indeed measure exactly the same temperature and to get an estimation of their inherent lagging time (graph on the left). You can see there is some small variation, especially at the end of the measurement, showing temporal errors in the temperature recordings. But more importantly, you see that iButtons lag behind in measuring abrupt temperature shocks, due to the way in which they are designed. They need almost half an hour to track the changes and refind a stable level. Keep in mind however that such abrupt temperature changes are pretty rare in the soil, making these lags acceptable in hourly measurements.

iButton lighting up

On the right, I repeated the cooling experiment, but now with packed iButtons. The red dots indicate the iButton wrapped in parafilm, the orange ones an iButton with both parafilm and a plastic bag. By adding the protection, the previously noticed lagging increases, but the difference never gets bigger than two or three minutes.

How does this little brave Saxifraga experience its environment? The iButtons will tell!

How does this little brave Saxifraga experience its environment? The iButtons will tell!

The protected iButtons almost manage to catch up as the temperature starts levelling off, although there lowest extreme value is still 0,2 °C lower than in the unprotected iButton. Note as well that the difference between the two protecting methods is negligible, which gives me reason to use the combined packing method for safety reasons.

I can be at ease in the mountains, the iButtons do what they have to do.

I can be at ease in the mountains, the iButtons do what they have to do.

Conclusion: we see how iButtons lag behind in their measurements, an issue that increases even more when put in protective parafilm. However, as we measure only once every hour, and as real life temperature changes are slower, these lags have a negligible effect on the end result in ecological long-term studies.

We can hence have faith in our iButtons!

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Presenting

Presentation

 

I am presenting intermediate results of my PhD-research at several occassions the last few weeks. Exciting stuff!

 

 

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Out you go!

Little brave seedlings, surviving everything they have to go through! At least until now…

Brave dandelion seedling

Remember the seeds we planted earlier? They were growing so successfully and swift, I decided they were ready for action. They even survived transplantation in separate little pots, followed by cold adaptation to the grey outside conditions of early december, all with almost a hundred percent survival rate.

Plant seedlings in plant tray

 So last week was the best moment to start with the real action and plant them in the gaps in our experimental grassland. We had one nice and sunny day this week that served as the perfect opportunity to put them out.

Experimental vegetation gap

Which is where they are now, ready to face the real winter. Unfortunately, we already had some crazy thunderstorms in the second half of the week. I did not have the chance yet to check how our little friends reacted to these massive downpours, but it would be a pity if all of them washed away on the high tides…

Abstract seedlings

Scary wait, it is, at least till next monday!

Experimental vegetation gap

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