Lessons from history

The Celts had been there. The Romans. Napoleon III. Soldiers had built stairs there for the German emperor. Century after century, people had climbed Le Grand Donon to overlook the world.

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It had made for a mythical place, one where humans and nature had finally been integrated into one. One where the human influence finally seemed to do less bad than good for a while.

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Coexistence. That feels like the key to me. A place that could host thousands of years of humans and still have the feel of its original roughness, that is a place where coexistence has been possible.

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I let the wind blow right through me, gave me over to the power of nature and imagined I felt just like the Celts and Romans thousands of years before me.

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Coexistence seems to be hard to find in my research, where human disturbance of the vegetation turns out – time after time – to be the most important driver of change.

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Unfortunately, this disturbance often goes further than a little temple on the top.

 

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Microclimate!

It is that time of the year again: when the weather nicely reveals the effect of microclimate on the landscape.

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If the world gets covered in a thin layer of snow, we can quickly see which spots are colder than others.

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And that knowledge reveals some interesting patterns that would otherwise easily stay unnoticed. These patterns are very important for my research, which is why I am happy to share them with you.

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It is easy to see what happened in this series of pictures. The snow covered the whole top of the mountain in a nice blanket, except for the trail. There, the snow did not want to stay, at least not at this intensity. We were the first (and maybe the only…) hikers of the day, so it was not a question of high traffic. More likely, it was a slight but significant difference in temperature between the vegetation and the open, disturbed, trail.

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So it turns out our trail is slightly warmer than its environment, which might be a good thing. Yet, there is another side to this story: Even though the trail might be warmer at the moment, it will end up having no protective snow cover. When temperatures drop during the night, the soil surface on the trail will drop substantially more on the trail then around it.

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On top of the world

It is nice when the world reminds me again of why I called this blog ‘On top of the world’ in the first place.

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It is this amazing thrill of climbing a mountain, working your way to the top, taking in the absolute beauty of mountain nature all around you.

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Last week brought us to the top of ‘Le Grand Donon’, a top of a little bit more than a thousand meters of elevation in the far northeastern corner of France. It was a slightly different trip than I am used to, as the circumstances where slightly different from ideal.

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It was snowing. It was freezing. It was incredibly windy. And yet, it was incredibly amazing.

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I guess we stood on top of the world for a while – before being blown off by the wind – but the mist did not allow us to take in the view.

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And yet, it was for a while the top of the world, and I adored it.

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Long and winding

It is a long and winding trail, the new project we are working on. A new and exciting question, with a lot of intermediate steps before we will get to the final answer.

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Beech forest in the Sonian forest, a beautiful – fairly authentic – forest close to Brussels.

Luckily, I love long and winding trails, they are the best that are out there! The final answer – a model of the global distribution of the non-native species of our interest – will be so exciting, that I like every step that brings us closer.

And even more luckily, I do not have to walk this trail alone. It is much nicer to work together on such a task, and luckily I have an amazing team around me now. So let us be off on our hike, and see where the trail will bring us!

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Alliances against invasion

This post first appeared on the MRI mountain blogs

In the discipline of mountain invasion, the enemy has many faces. Some are large and visible, marching uphill in plain sight. Others are small and sneaky, slipping invisibly and unnoticed behind your back. The problem is: it is not always the big and visible enemies that matter most.

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Reindeer herding and migration may increase the rate of pathogen introductions in cold environments, especially under warmer conditions.

It is hard to keep track of all these different faces of the enemy when one stays within his own research discipline. If we want to tackle the global problem of mountain invasion, at least as many different ecologists will be needed as groups of invading species. A recent paper in Biological Invasions describes what might be the world’s first effort ever to use strategic alliances against mountain invaders. The paper shows how 22 scientists with expertise covering all major organism groups and geographic regions joined forces to tackle questions about mountain invasions. Their aim was to find new ways to deal with novel species interactions and the immediate threats posed by emerging invasive species.

The main conclusions of the paper are painfully clear: the main pathways for species invasion into the mountains, whatever the species group, are anthropogenic. This we know very well from the big and visible species groups, like the non-native plants that so clearly follow mountain roads towards higher elevations. It is likely, however, that less visible species like fungi, insects and pathogens also use some kind of human-created pathways. They all have their own (sometimes very devious) ways to hitchhike to the top.

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Mycorrhizal mutualism is needed for Pinus contorta to invade in South America. 

The main outcome of all these moving species (as both natives and non-natives are hurrying uphill nowadays) is totally new sets of species in the mountains. These shifts in species composition will have important effects on those species that have to welcome the newcomers, and those that are not as fast to join the uphill rush. For now, the effects of these new species interactions remain largely unexplored. It is likely that negative effects can be expected, for example through the invasion of diseases and pathogens into cold environments.

To tackle these complex problems in a changing world, collaborations are our only hope. As shown by the recent paper in Biological Invasions, steps in the right direction have already been taken. Many scientific questions however remain, so future collaborations should be encouraged. Because as we all know, many watchmen see more than one.

Reference:

Pauchard et al. (2015) Non-native and native organisms moving into high elevation and high latitude ecosystems in an era of climate change: new challenges for ecology and conservation. Biological Invasions. DOI 10.1007/s10530-015-1025-x

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Amiens

All welcome to visit the picture gallery from my recent visit to Amiens, via this link, or (probably better) by going to the right of my website.

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Le Club d’Aviron in winter weather

I offer you a gallery filled with the most beautiful architecture France has to offer, captured under a precious winter sun to make it stand out even more.

The cathedral of Amiens

Behind the camera, hidden out of sight, there was a lot of science going on under these freezing blue skies, but you will have to wait while I process the results some more, before I can reveal the true reason of my visit to the world!

Cathedral of Amiens from le Parc de l'Evêché

While I stubbornly keep making progress on the statistics, please just enjoy the gallery.

 

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