End of the year

The year is almost over, meaning I will celebrate my first New Year as a PhD student. The first 3 months of my job went by incredibly swift. It feels like I should start worrying about the end already!

Christmas star

On the other hand, now I have full days available to study the mountains I love, I can realize a lot more than I thought. The hard work should start to pay of in 2014, as my  rewards are on the way in the form of my first (and maybe even second) paper. Moreover, I am preparing several large and small presentations, I start some teaching and expand my international network of colleagues and projects, all while the plants of my experiments are steady growing only to reveal their secrets when I start traveling again in spring.

A bright and interesting future, that’s for sure, so this is a good time to wish you all a happy new year and post my most important good intention for the next year: working hard in order to gather interesting science, stories and images to share with all of you.

Christmas bauble

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Macro

 Paw  Thanks to my personal favorite Santa Claus, I recently added these nice little rings to my photographic equipment:

Macro lens

It is a 4-piece close-up lens set that will allow me to get incredibly close to my subject. They are especially useful to capture the beautiful mini-majestic world I lost my heart to. I hope to use them to bring you more breathtaking images of the plants I study. I promise to take them with me as I travel the globe.

Pineapple

Other photographers wondering if they would prefer these above a regular macro-lens: the quality is not comparable, but if you are limited in packing weight (as I am when I am on a scientific mission) and still want to catch some of the macro-world, these lenses are an irresistible option. Major plus: they are not expensive at all.

Paw

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Hero-rats

It is Christmas again, traditionally the period in which one of the local radiostations organizes a benefit campaign for some praiseworthy charity organization.

 Hero-rat

This year, the university of Antwerp contributed to the campaign by raising money for one of their own projects, called Apopo. This project is a wonderful example of the use of biology in our society. The Apopo-project is a university-supported and Africa-based training program for rats to detect landmines and tuberculosis.

Isn’t that just plain wonderful use of biological knowledge?

SONY DSC

In 2010, on an internship with the university to Tanzania, we visited the training site of these hero rats. For no more reward than pieces of delicious banana, they help to clean post-war regions from highly dangerous landmines. They use their sensitive little noses to  smell the ammunition. This same skill and hunger for bananas can be used to recognize the smell of tuberculosis in sputum samples, significantly speeding up tuberculosis diagnosis in highly populated areas in Africa.

Apopo Tanzania

Wonderful project, no doubt about it, but unfortunately very expensive. It costs approximately 6000 euros to train a rat. From then on, it can luckily be used for a long time, sniffing through fields and warning the mining service where to find the explosives. Fortunately, they are not heavy enough themselves to let the mines explode, so sacrificing the cute little heroes is not necessary.

Hero-rat

(They proudly joined the ‘Animals’-gallery on the right of this blog).

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Profiling the bad boys

In war, it is important to profile your enemies. You should know the qualities and the weaknesses of the other party, to adequately predict their next move.

As I said on the results page,  invasiveness is not a skill known to every plant. Plants need the combination of the right characteristics, with a little bit of additional luck. Here, I profile some of the most likely candidates for invasion: the ruderals (check those badasses out on the picture!).

 Ruderal

These species are designed for the guerrilla-war: they travel fast, have fantastic germination capacities even in the most horrible circumstances and reproduce like rabbits in the shortest possible timespan.

They like human presence, because they are perfectly adapted to survived in disturbed plots where other plants fail to thrive. Between cracks in roads, on the railroad, vertically on walls, simply everywhere where they can find a tiny hole. This is the exact explanation for why they are so widespread in cities and all kind of places influenced by humans. They follow us everywhere were we expand our concrete world.

Ruderal2

The above gives a traditional view of an ideal invader: quickly reproducing plants, always  first to germinate on disturbed plots. However, as I will show later, we will need another profile if we look at invasion in mountains. There, the ruderals turn out to be not the main danger. We will have to re-profile our enemies there, or we will totally miss the point.

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Spoiling the birds

I like spoiling those happy little feather balls before my office window. After a trial period, in which I tried to seduce them to come closer to my window, I now installed some more high-tech equipment:

Bird food

It seems to work pretty fine, as the regular visits of great tits (and occasional squirrels) continue. With the increasingly cold weather, even more birds seem convinced to visit me and my generosity. I ticked off blue tits, long-tailed tits, robins and even some goldcrests.

Blue tit

Although my fancy supply mechanism looks perfect, most birds still seem to prefer the cheap stuff. I don’t know why, although they showed furious picking behavior towards the plastic cover (no, my fierce friend, you’re not getting anything by just hitting the plastic!). Maybe it is all just a little bit too complicated for their tiny bird-brains.

Blue tit

Nevertheless, I am waiting excitingly until it starts freezing, because then the feathered traffic will only increase!

Long-tailed tit

These and some other cute pictures joint the picture gallery ‘Animals’ on the right of my blog. I strongly recommend taking a look!

 

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The results

On monday, I taught a course on plant invasions in extreme environments to the master  students during their course on Plant Ecology. 

These students had the luck on their side as they were the first to see some of my own research results. I only showed a glimpse, of course, because I want to wait with the big revelations until my work is published.

On this page, I want to give a brief overview of where my research is heading. Every time I get to the next step, it will be added to the story on this page under ‘The results’ in the menu.

Snow

The picture on the left shows a mountain system on a bright day in the middle of spring. Obviously, that’s not a very nice place for plants to live. Only the tough ones, with millions of years of evolutionary adaptation, manage to survive. They are  armed with adaptations to  short growing seasons,  frost,  snow, strong winds, stony soils, lack of nutrients and excessive radiation.

For lowland plants, this world is a true nightmare. They don’t have all these nice adaptations, like small leaves, huge root systems, water holding qualities, anti freezing solutions,… They have broad, vulnerable leaves, created to grow quickly when resources are available.

It is clear that these plants do not belong up there. However, and that is the whole point of the story, they ARE growing there. In the  beginning there are only a few, some loners here and there. Later on there show more and more plants up. Nowadays, great groups of them are marching uphill. There are a lot of factors behind this strange and recent behavior and it is my scientific duty to find out the truth.

Dandelion3I will tackle the problem from several sides at once (I have several years to fill!). First things first: I answer the question how these invaders find their way up the mountains. This turns out to be a funny one: they come by car, by truck, by foot, even by ski lift… No human transportation method too strange or it can be used by plants to get uphill.

So far so good, but how do they cope with this horrible climate I mentioned before? They can not stay safely in a car and put the heater on! No, they can’t, but they can use their fellow plants for pretty much the same purpose: as natural heater. Nicely sheltered under a well-protected shrub, circumstances can dramatically improve.

Moreover, the alpine climate may be much better suited for invaders than seems on first sight. There isn’t one climate in the mountains. They have a whole patchwork of warm and cold, dry and wet, sheltered and exposed sides. All of them more or less suited for invasion. By using the best spots, the invader can get hundreds of meters higher than expected.

Summer snow

It turns out hiding under  vegetation is a valuable trick. But most of the time, it seems to be difficult for a new plant to germinate underneath the hostile vegetation of the alps. Once more they profit from a  bit of human help: our destroying capabilities expose bare soil, creating nice open spaces for invaders, free of  competition.

As you can see, the two previous explanations show signs of contradiction. Both processes work together: the help of the vegetation is a plus, the competition a minus. The invaders  have to choose and weigh the options. What their choice will be, depends on how bad the climate is in that location.

Trifolium repens

Being a successful invader is not for everybody.  It needs the ideal mix of plant superpowers, most of them pointing towards a chameleon-approach. An ideal invader is a plant that fits everywhere: cold or warm, dry or wet.
I am curious to find out the answers on all these different questions.  I hope I can soon share them with you.

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