Building on history

Close to Perth, we stumbled upon a beautiful castle called Scone Palace (yes, written like the tea-time cakes but no, not pronounced in the same way). It is a place filled with history, proud of hosting the hill that has seen ample Scottish coronations, and with centuries worth of stories to tell.

Old stones in Scone Palace

The old stones of Scone Palace, the perfect place to ponder about the history of science.

While roaming through Scotlands’ history in this beautiful castle and its gardens, my thoughts wandered off to the history of mountain ecology.

Scone Palace

And, I had to admit, we are quite lucky on that account. My favourite presentations at the Perth conference on Mountains of our Future Earth were those were we could finally start speaking of long-term data and were temporal changes became apparent through consistent observation.

Old graveyard, Scone Palace

Nature writing history, we only have to read it.

There are those brave data miners that delve deep into history towards the records of the heroes of the twentieth century: botanists that recorded plant species occurrences in hundreds of mountains. Some of them minutiously recording every detail, some of them might have been a bit sloppy, some of them were more trustworthy than others, but all of them together provide a large mountain of data on how the alpine world might have looked like more than 50 years ago.

Old graveyard, Scone Palace

If you could find back their plots (or create new plots on a similar location) and resurvey the plants that grow there, you get an idea of what has changed in the mountains over this significant period of time. This approach at the moment provides some fascinating insights: plants moving upwards with climate change, but not yet falling from the top, species richness increasing at the highest elevations, and a set of species with similar traits turning out as the big winners.

Autumn crocus on Boot Hill, Scone Palace

It will be tremendously fascinating to follow these historical efforts in the future, until that other type of long-term data collection gets in full swing: observational plots deliberately set up to be resurveyed in the future, and datasets growing one (or several) years at a time.

Old graveyard, Scone Palace

Some of the most interesting plots set up in this manner are now almost turning 15 years old, and all over the world, time series are getting longer (and patterns thus clearer).

Scone Palace

This is definitely a fascinating time to be a mountain ecologist, building upon a growing history and aiming for the future. Global change is incredibly hard to understand and predict, but with the joint effort of hundreds of devoted scientists, we are actually answering more questions than I would have ever expected.

Posted in Scotland | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

A mid-meeting musing (and mushrooms!)

The Scottish forests bring autumn, but the conference on Mountains of our Future Earth feels like high summer.

Scottish mushroom

Mushrooms in the Scottish woods around Perth

After ten years and currently in the third edition, the Perth conference in particular (and mountain research as a whole) seems to have grown to full maturity, with a strong research base established by a growing set of scientists, and a clear view of what the future needs to bring. Building on impressive databases from countless global networks (like us with our own MIREN-network), we can now answer more questions than ever before, and that realisation is promising for our ‘Future Earth’, the world that this conference meeting hopes to save. The future clearly lies in these global efforts and scientists talking to each other. The joint effort is the best effort.

Autumn forest in Scotland

Very proud to be part of that!

Posted in Scotland | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

S9. Invasive species in mountain regions

This is the short summary of the conference session I chaired at the Perth conference on Mountains of our Future Earth! As MIREN-representative I chaired and presented in the session on invasion in mountain regions.

lembrechtsjonas's avatarPerth2015 Session Synthesis Blogs

This post might be updated irregularly throughout the meeting. Last update 5/9/15 16:00 by Jonas Lembrechts.

Invasive species in mountain regions. An emerging hot topic with an increasing set of risks, questions and consequently papers in mountain regions. A topic that well deserves its place next to the other environmental issue as a separate session on this conference. A topic much broader than can be grasped by only one small session, but the five presentations we had gave a broad overview on the several stages of mountain invasions and the questions that can be asked.

We started with two presentations on risk assessment and the investigation of the limits and possibilities of mountain invasion, the first one brought by Marwa Halma (Alexandria University in Egypt) working on the risk of invasion by the tree Prosopis juliflora in Egypt. She showed how we can model the current and future distribution of…

View original post 391 more words

Posted in General | Leave a comment

Getting in the right mood

Overlooking the valley of the river Tay in Perth

Overlooking the valley of the river Tay in Perth

Today we climbed the slopes of Kinnoull Hill, the beautiful hill overlooking Perth and its valley, to get in the right mood for the mountain conference that is starting tomorrow. We enjoyed a beautiful morning with a shy sun piercing through the clouds. The hill is only a little bit more than 200 meters above sea level, but its steep cliffs at one side at least brought a bit of mountain feel.

The evening I went for the registration at the conference hall (plenty of friendly and helpful Scottish people there). I got a chocolate for filling in their survey that was sent earlier by e-mail, hooray!

The chocolate was delicious.

Posted in Scotland | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Mountains of our future earth

Today, I am off to Perth to represent MIREN (and myself) at the mountain conference on Mountains of our Future Earth.

Let's see what is happening to the balance in mountains! Is this a starting avalanche, or will it last a bit longer?

Hoping to learn what will happen to the mountains of our future earth. Is this the start of an avalanche, or will the balance last for a while longer?

I am pretty excited to see Scotland (yes, it will be the Scottish Perth) and even more to explore the unstable balance that is global change in mountains.

Let’s see what we can find out about this balance and in which way it is tipping!

Posted in Scotland | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Done some digging

image

All but two soil temperature sensors dug up, and that is always a big relief!
Two lost probably to some overachieving moles, but overall the success ratio is high…

Posted in Belgium | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment