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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Eating hay and looking pretty

Horse-eye

I already mentioned it in my previous post: working on a campus that is kicked out of the Antwerp city center is nothing to feel sad about. It gives me the satisfaction of a warm welcome by these beautiful horses everyday on my way to work.

 

Horse-head

Most of the time they are just standing there close together, eating hay and looking pretty. But what else should a happy horse do?

Horse-ear

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City-visit

I spend all my working days at the university of Antwerp. The city of Antwerp itself however stays out of sight most of the time, because the life sciences have their own green campus outside the city center.

Working outside the city center has two main advantages. First: I have the beautiful countryside as a working environment. Second, I can visit the city of Antwerp as a real tourist, enjoying such internationally celebrated landmarks as the Central Station and the main shopping street.

Antwerp central station

Antwerp city

Antwerp city

I decided to visit Antwerp for some hours in this wonderful December-period (Christmas-shopping, you know), in which random kinds of decoration were put all over the city. The giant wooden Christmas balls especially pleased me, even though I missed their pretty little lights at night.

Christmas balls  The Central Station already had a reputation of special attractions, this time in the shape of a dinosaur, mighty and tall as he overlooked the central hall. I positioned myself under his raised foot and tried to imagine the beating of my heart if he would be real and towering over my head like that.

He from his side did not seem to notice me at all.

Central statiosaur

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Survival tricks from the plant world

What I find highly fascinating about plants is how they trick us all. At first sight, they look so helpless. Which, I assure you, they are NOT!

There is this saying: “if you don’t like it where your are, just move, you are not a tree”. True, if a tree grows somewhere, it can not move anywhere. Plants however possess a whole scala of possibilities to find the right spot in the first place, or to make a spot fit their strenuous needs. If you don’t like it in the desert, because there is no water, there is no reason at all to give up. Just growing several tens of meters of root system does the trick perfectly. The same holds true for nutrients. If you do not find enough food, just bond with a bunch of fungi and let them bring you everything you want. Helpless? Not at all!

And then there is that one fascinating trick I really love: if you don’t know the faith of your children, just make thousands. Send them out to all directions of the wind and hope they find a good life. Chances are high that at least part of your offspring finds what they need.

Willowherbseeds Travel tricks

I like how some plants give every one of their children a little parachute and, with the blessing of mummy, launch them into the sky. It is wonderful to see how successful this strategy turns out to be. So wonderful I made it a major factor of my research: traveling plants and how they find their perfect location.

Fluffy seeds overlooking the Trollsjön

 

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A cold scientist is not a scientist

I already shared a lot of stories about the cold (here, here and here).  As a researcher in the subarctic mountains, this cold is  an omnipresent companion, so it is definitely worth the thoughts.

It is from uttermost importance to keep your internal temperature sufficiently high in the field; not only for your physical health (although the own body should always be more important than the research), but also for the sake of the experiment. ‘A cold scientist is not a scientist,’ and beside feeling unhappy, he starts making mistakes he will regret later on. Thinking is difficult when you feel frozen, but it is even more difficult to give the fieldwork all the angelic patience it deserves (and that’s a lot!).

Luckily, I found another fantastic tool to fight this omnipresent companion: my beloved, highly isolating tea thermos. It keeps my tea warm forever, and if you add a lot of sugar, it also provides the sweet kick that keeps you going forever!

Science, here I come!!

Tea, please

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Vandals!

It is one of the major challenges in field ecology, although it is not more than a practical question: how can I leave my scientifical equipment out in the field?

You want to measure soil water content during the whole growing season, but don’t want to travel up the mountain every day?
You are on a hunt for mammals that are very hard to see and you want to leave a camera trap in the forest?
You put seeds of your favorite alien species in the soil and want to put some sticks to mark the plot?

There are plenty occasions that field ecologists have no other option than to leave very expensive (economically and/or emotionally) material in the field, unprotected an vulnerable for our worst enemies: vandals!

It happens more often than good for science: vandals take away your equipment, damage it, destroy it or in any other way they ruin your experiment. I know a story of an experiment high in the mountains in Northern Scandinavia, on a place where nobody ever comes. The small sticks that marked the experiment where all carefully collected and put on a pile. It is not less than a horror story for every field ecologist, because it could imply everything from a small delay to starting over from the very beginning.

All my own plots were still intact last time I checked, and most of them should be save, but as soon as someone starts mowing the plots closest to the city, the experiment is doomed. And save in my office in Belgium, I have no way to save them if needed.

I read a fascinating article about this issue (more easy info here). It is a (real) scientific publication about dummy boxes that looked like expensive scientific equipment. In order to find a way to avoid damage by vandals, the scientists attached 3 different messages: a neutral one (please don’t disturb), a very aggressive one (something like: we are watching you, police will find you if you mess with this box!) and a more personal approach, associated with a cute picture of a squirrel to melt the heart of even the meanest vandal.

As you may have guessed, the cute squirrel won the contest, as the least contact with vandals was recorded (most of the time moving of the box, but also opening, damaging or even stealing of all that precious research material!). Maybe more surprising is the fact that the aggressive sign had the least impact.

Scientific equipment

After: Clarin BM, Bitzilekis E, Siemer BM, Goerlitz HR (2013) Personal messages reduce vandalism and theft of unattended scientific equipment. Methods in Ecology and Evolution. doi: 10.1111/2041-210X.12132

Moral of the story: if you ask vandals kindly to stop vandalizing, you have the highest chance they’ll listen.

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