Knotted

Recently, I have been giving more thoughts to the human influence on nature in our own country. When walking through Flanders, it soon gets obvious that humans are everywhere. Even more, it is clear that the pure, undisturbed nature is gone completely in the region, and has been for many years.

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What we have left is a few, scattered patches of half-nature: parks, a few patches of forests, heathlands… A sad notion, indeed. And still, walking through the same Flanders, you can find a lot of potential, if you know where to look.

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This knotted willow, for example, on the shore of a little stream close to Mechelen, in the populated center of Flanders. A tree that would not exist without humans, a tree that would never look as stunning without our help. A micro-environment for plants, insects and even birds. It might not be what it was before, but it definitely stands in its own right.

Fruit for thought, for sure. To keep out the depression, at least, and believe in a future where humans and nature can live in harmony. Yet definitely not to  justify further destruction of the nature we have left.

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Global change ecology

Our research center – the excellence center on Global Change Ecology – started its own blog! Unfortunately for the international audience here, the blog is in Dutch, yet it featured my recent article on the difference between climate and weather!

 

 

 

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Blinded by a snowball, now as ‘verblind door een sneeuwbal’ on the global change ecology blog

 

We hope to bring up to date and scientifically supported posts on all factors of global change that are covered in our group: climate change, climate extremes, invasive species, nutrient cycling, habitat fragmentation and many more… As the center on global change ecology is a collaboration between 3 research groups, we have the chance to approach these problems from all possible sides, and advance faster to solutions!

Contributing to the understanding of our changing world, one discovery at a time.

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Lines

What I love about winter is how it accentuates the lines in the landscape.

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Yet the most important lines of this season are the deadlines, and this January had quite a lot of them.

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We submitted two big projects that – if all goes well – could result in major expansion of our research on plant invasions. Throughout the years, we discovered many more things that we do not know yet, and it would mean a lot if we could go on a hunt for the answers.

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For now, it just means waiting… When summer is back upon us, the wait will be finally over.

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Blinded by a snowball

There once was this US senator who brought a snowball to the parliament to proof climate  change is not as bad as we wanted him to believe.

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A small act, you could even call it a joke, yet it pops up in my mind every time our world is covered in snow and ice. Yes, it is cold, it can even be extremely cold, it can even snow in Spain and the Sahara. But that does not mean climate change is less real.

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Being blinded by a bit of snow is a common misconception. The senator with the snowball could do with a look at the video of the man who walks his dog, showing the difference between trend and variation. The happy dog hops around, going left, going right, going straight, sniffing and looking. His trajectory highly unpredictable. Yet, slowly and steadily, he is going towards the upper right corner of the panel. Even though every next step of our little buddy could surprise us, we still now he is going to end up there. And that is because of the owner, the man on a line, the trend line. The dog symbolises the weather, unpredictable in its every move. The owner is the climate, slowly and steadily warming.

We know this is happening. We do not need the absence of snowballs to proof it. You can see it in our longterm data, like this beautiful, yet shocking, timelapse of the worlds temperature from 1880 till now:

More on this one on nasa.gov.

So we should not look at the variation, but at the trend. True. But what if our steady-walking owner is not going in a straight line? He might make some turns as well? And that brings us to another argument of climate change deniers: if we zoom out far enough – let’s say a few thousand or even million years – our owner has been walking all over the place. He has been higher, he has been lower, he has been everywhere.

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True. Our climate has seen some variation in the past. Yet we know now that our owner now is climbing an increasingly steep slope. We know that such steep slopes have been extremely disruptive for biodiversity in the past. And we also know that it is our emission of greenhouse gasses that is chasing our guy uphill. Clearly he has been everywhere, but rarely he moves so rapidly, and when he did, it was often catastrophic for live on earth.

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Earlier this week I went to a lecture from Jens-Christian Svenning, a scientist from Danmark. He studies longterm effects of climate on biodiversity, and his story is fascinating. He showed that our world is still catching up to climate events from the past, some of them even millions of years ago. The fact that we do not have some species in the Scandinavian mountains that could be there based on where they live in the Alps, or that we do have tons of palm species in the Americas yet relatively few in Africa, it is the result from longterm changes in the climate. This shows how long-lasting the effects of a change in the climate can be. Climate change effects in the past have been big, and their legacy is still felt in the present. Then what to expect from this sudden, massive change in climate that is currently upon us? How far will these effects go? But what this shows most clearly, is that species adjust their distribution to changes in the climate, yet that they are limited in how far they can go.

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So yes, the owner is the trend, but that does not mean that the dog does not matter! On the contrary. Extreme weather events, from one year to the next, can have a massive influence on our world. One big frost or drought is sometimes enough to disrupt a whole ecosystem. Indeed, plants and animals do not experience the trend as it is, no, they experience the weather from day to day, often even with small-scale variations over distances of a few meters (or less!).

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So, why bother with the owner as it is the dog that is felt in reality? To grasp that, you best check the first video again. Our dog is following the same route as his owner, albeit not directly. We know that the owner/trend will end up at the top right (if nothing changes his path), even when the dog sometimes heads down. Moreover, yet not shown in our little video, we know now that on his way to the top, the dog is getting more and more excited. Climate change is resulting in more extreme weather events, the dog starts to care less about his owner: more ups, more downs, more jumping all around. As it is these ups and downs, these extremes, that are felt by those living on our planet, this obviously creates additional strains on the living world.

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So where does this leave us? The smallest scale matters. Yet if the trend is moving upwards, the small scale will follow. More extremes might force the world to adjust rapidly. Yet we know from looking at the past that there is a limit to the adaptability of species. Cross that line, and they are inevitably lost. It leaves us with the conclusion that we should take our climate seriously, and not just throw snowballs and move on.

Want to know more? Check out skepticalscience.com for more common misconceptions about climate change.

 

 

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Knotweeding

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The river Zenne in Zemst, Belgium

It was a mess of pieces, like shattered bones on a battlefield. A macaber sight that seemed to add some extra drama to the story of plant invasion.

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In between all the branches and sticks on the frozen floor, new leaves where already sprouting again. With the night temperatures below 0 °C for more than a week, these little green leaves showed  Japanese knotweed at its most versatile.

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You can fight and weed it as much as you want, it will always come back. When summer will be here, the whole shore of the river Zenne will be filled again with a dense forest of the bamboo-like stems.

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The Japanese knotweed, or Fallopia japonica, is a fascinatingly sturdy plant. A centimeter of roots or stem left in the soil is enough to establish again. Against all odds, this invasive species does not depend on impressive seed production. In fact, up till 2008, no fertile male knotweed had ever been observed in the area.

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With the needle-like pattern created by the over-night frost, even this bonefield started to look beautiful. Yet that did not take away the poverty of a big patch of knotweed: a monoculture, with virtually no animals that can live in it. A living battlefield, if you want.

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Global Change Ecology Centre initiates CO2 compensation of flights

As I said earlier, we at the Global Change Ecology Centre of the University of Antwerp are working towards a reduction of our carbon footprint, through a more sustainable flight strategy and a carbon compensation project. As I find this extremely important for scientists to provide a good example here, I wanted to use the summary of the project that the University recently published on their website. May it inspire others!

In a first step, all work related flights at the Global Change Ecology Centre will be CO2-compensated from January 1st 2017, in cooperation with the project Wildlife Works. Dr. Mwangi Githiru presented the “Wildlife Works” project on November 15th 2016. He provided information on the REDD+ programme and focused on the specific project area in Kenya that GCE will cooperate with. Wildlife Works has been certified through the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) and the “Climate, Community and Biodiversity Standard” (CCB). Compensation will be a part of a larger sustainable flight strategy, where absolute necessity of each flight, as well as alternate transport options and tele-conferencing will be considered.

The basic principle is that all research related flights will be compensated (not only those paid through UAntwerpen), unless another third party has already arranged CO2 compensation. The compensation will be paid for flights of paid employees, postdocs, ATP, professors and PhD-aspirants on the occasion of:

  • Conferences, workshops, symposia, lectures, …
  • Sampling campaigns and field trips

This also includes the incoming and outgoing flights of invited guests, that were invited for lectures or cooperation talks.

Other research groups at University of Antwerp and beyond already indicated their interest to join the initiative. Interested people can always contact the GCE. Within the department of Biology, we have used the momentum to discuss the sustainability of the operation of the whole department. On January 27th , members form the different biology research groups will join for a first workgroup on sustainability.

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