New life

There is new life on the campus of my university! In the field next to the plots of my new experiment on the campus, a young foal is happily hopping around.

Spring in 't veld

His cute little face makes fieldwork on the campus even more fun.

Foal

Look at it, with its way-too-long legs that make it so difficult to reach the ground! His clumsy moves make him the very definition of adorable cuteness.

Too long legs

Although he tries to be a brave explorer, he still stays really close to mommy. With every sudden movement, he quickly runs in hiding behind her large and safe side.

Foal in hiding

I think I will have to do a lot of fieldwork this spring, just to get the opportunity to say hi to this cutie.

Foal kissing mother

Fantastic gain for the field I already liked so much (see earlier).

Foal

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Penguin parade

Penguins are one of the main touristic attractions in Punta Arenas. There even live more penguins than people in the southern Magellan provence, so they really are the real owners of southern Chile.

Proud penguin

There is a colony of these funny looking puppets right on the shore and I was really excited to visit them.

Pinguïneras

However, when I arrived on the road to this colony, there was a gate blocking the way. A closed gate, with no-one but one pretty dog around to guard it. The dog looked at me with compassion in his eyes while I tried to find a way in, and he saw me go again without any success.

Dog

Back in Belgium, I made up for this disappointing trip by visiting their friends at the local zoo, where they recently got a brand new environment.

Swimming penguin

There, I could see them at least from as close and for as long as I wanted.

Penguin

They were all together enjoying the sun and warmth of the spring weather. They obviously had a fantastic time in the water.

Funny penguin

They were all extremely cute and totally making up for the missed chance to see them in their natural environment in Chile.

Swimming penguin

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Alien impact

A lot of my work deals with invasive alien species. This is a subject not everyone is familiar with, although it highly concerns (or should concern) everybody and our whole society. I sporadically provided some information on alien species and my research on them (mainly summarized on the ‘science‘-page of this blog), but I kept my silence about the big ‘why’-question. This page will be used to clarify things a bit more, but I also want to point out the fantastic and very readable book of Daniel Simberloff: Invasive species, what everyone needs to know.

Negative effects

In the middle of the 19th century, an amateur naturalist in America tried to figure out a way to produce silk, as the civil war had cut off the southern supply of cotton. He went to Europe to find himself a useful silk moth species and arranged to bring over eggs of the gypsy moth. He kept his moths in a little cage in his garden to experiment with the silk.

Exotic butterfly

Exotic species are imported for countless different reasons, here for a butterfly garden.

As could have been expected, the moths managed to escape from their cage. The silk also turned out to be useless and the end of the civil war brought back the southern cotton. The whole project turned out completely useless and would soon have been forgotten in the depths of history, if not for the gypsy moths that escaped and soon started to spread all over the United States. Many failing attempts to eliminate the little moth only resulted in it spreading over state after another. The moths feed on trees, causing massive defoliation, changes in the habitat of hundreds of forest species and altering the forest composition of North American forests.

Canadian geese

Canadian geese are a well known invasive species. Their impact on the ecosystem is closely monitored.

When chemical eradication turned out to be powerless, a natural enemy of the gypsy moth was introduced. The parasitic fly failed in controlling the gypsy moth, but nowadays threatens many different native moth species. The economical cost is huge, as states tried to fight the moth and saw their timber getting lost.

This little story (derived from Simberloffs great book) clearly shows why invasive species can cause problems. They influence all parts of society. They can cause huge economic costs, not only lost to the fight against the invaders, but also through damage to agriculture or hindering of navigation. They can cause severe health problems, like many exotic diseases and insects. Their ecological effect can be enormous, as they alter whole ecosystems, replace or consume native species and change biological processes.

Turtles

Exotic turtles can really ravage the native freshwater communities.

Alien plant species, the subject of my studies in particular, are known to alter fire regimes, changing the hydrology and completely modifying entire ecosystems. They cost large amounts of money to agriculture in the form of herbicides and replaced natural species compositions all over the world, creating a global, boring, similar weedy vegetation associated with human presence.

I study some of the locations where plant invasions are still rare: mountains and the subarctic. There we risk loosing the vulnerable natural vegetation, disordering the whole alpine and subarctic ecosystem that is known to restore tragically slow. Losing this system has a high ecological cost, but would also mean the loss of the aesthetical attractiveness of these regions for tourism.

Protect the mountains

Positive effects

Like everything in real life, there is another side of the story that should also be told. Not all alien species are bad, a lot of them even have many positive effects. Nowadays, we would not come far without potatoes or maize for example, and their positive effect for society are immense (although their negative effect on nature should not be forgotten). Many garden plants are aliens, but never become a problem or invasive.

This last point is also very important: many alien species never become invasive. There are many limiting factors that help preventing this. Non-invasive aliens often have only limited effects on the environment. But it is those few that become invasive that make it important to carefully watch all aliens and predict which one will become a problem. Predicting the effects of a new alien however turns out to be a nearly impossible task.

Exotic orchid

The chance for an exotic orchid to became invasive is almost zero; they miss the right features.

Conclusions on alien species should hence always be case-specific, by carefully weighing positive and negative effects for both nature and society. Only then, correct decisions can be made. This provides a serious task for society now and in the future.

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Spring

Anemone

The free time and the nice spring weather around Easter created some fantastic opportunities to finally focus on native vegetation again.

        Luxemburg rocks

I got invited to the beautiful hills and forests in Luxemburg, a fantastic chance nobody should ever refuse. It became a weekend filled with rocks, trees, spring flowers and – luckily – only a very limited amount of invasive aliens.

Luxemburg

The beech forest was full of fresh leaves in the prettiest shades of green, with colors only a real forest in springtime can provide.

Beech

Beech

The understory was a rich field of white flowers, with plenty of wood anemone and wood sorrel.

 Anemone

Oxalis

In the shaded areas, tongue ferns uncurled their leaves.

Tongue fern

All kinds of beautiful reminders of why I chose this research area again, if I would ever hesitate! Another nice reminder can be found on the INTERACT-blog, where I explained my trip to Chile in more details. Pictures from Chile can also be found on the right of my blog, in the picture gallery.

Rock cheese

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New plans

Hooray! I got permission to start a new experiment this summer! This time no exotic location, however. I will stay with both feet on the university grounds, where I got access to almost 100 square meter of boring grassland on the experimental site of our research group.

Project site

This grassland will serve me well in solving some of the remaining mysteries about disturbance, microclimate and their combined effect on plants. Because it is all about the smallest scale, I do not need much more space than those few meters of grass.

Field site

I will basically walk around like a big Godzilla in my plot to create gaps. Large gaps, small gaps and all kinds of gaps in between, all free of vegetation and freely available for gap invaders. These gap invaders will get a little bit of help from me, as I will sow seeds in all the gaps. When the plants are growing, I will closely monitor the conditions within the gaps, especially temperature and humidity. The important part is that I will look on a much smaller scale, not just at gaps as a whole, but at the variation on different locations within the gaps. This will learn us what those seedlings are réally feeling, and that is what we really need to understand them! The picture shows the kind of gaps we are talking about, in this case naturally made by a mole.

Gap

With this fieldwork comes a nice chance to leave the office once in a while and enjoy spring outside. It does not matter it is only 100 meters from my office, because nature can also be found just around the corner. I already discovered a busy bee hotel at the entrance of the field site and birds were singing everywhere while spring was getting on full speed. Working could be worse…

 Bee Bee hotel

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Catch the wind

Wind blows along unseen, but not unfelt. Winds are everywhere and serve especially in the mountains as an omnipresent companion. I tried to catch the impressiveness of this natural force in pictures to help imagining what mountain plants have to face on a daily base.

Walkers facing wind

Strong and cold winds are the main forces that shape the harsh climate in the mountains. They are so important and impossible to ignore on high elevations that we expect them to be one of the main limiting factors for the establishment of plants in mountains. Our studied species in the experiment also have to deal with this major challenge, especially there where we removed the blanket of covering vegetation.

Ice and wind

Just imagine, the bare soil on a mountain slope, exposed to cold winds that bring biting frost all year long. Uncovered and unprotected plants have a hard task defying these circumstances. However, under the cover of the established vegetation reigns a totally different climate, protected against the gusting wind-power, and probably much safer for seedlings.

Lago Grey 2

I never experienced such winds as in the Andes. There, winds were so strong they even became visible. I was especially impressed by the rainbow tornado’s, when strong winds blew over the surface of a lake to create a cloud of splashing water running fast and spinning around itself. With the right solar angle, these tiny tornado’s resulted in splendid and colorful images.

      Rainbow Tornado 2 Rainbow Tornado

The summer could have been really warm here, if it was not for the winds bringing down the temperature with several degrees. It is this significant wind-driven decrease in temperature that makes the area perfectly suited for our research at the edge of a plant’s growing abilities.

Walkers facing wind

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