People
Charlotte Møller, Niek Scheepens (PI), Pieter De Frenne
Funding
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
Duration
April 2020 - March 2023
In short
In this project we investigate adaptation of
understorey herbs to forest management.
Project description
Plant adaptation to land use has commonly been studied within the
context of managed grassland ecosystems, whereas studies on the adaptation of
forest understorey herbs to forest management are lacking. This is surprising
because of the strong impact of forest management on the forest understorey
environment, especially on light and soil moisture conditions, which are likely
to exert strong constraints on forest understorey herbs. We predict that this
environmental variation acts as divergent selection pressure causing phenotypic
trait differentiation and local adaptation of forest understorey herbs to
forest management.
In our project HerbAdapt, embedded in the Biodiversity Exploratories, we perform two common garden experiments – one of them including a
light and drought treatment – as well as a reciprocal transplant experiment to
test this prediction for multiple common forest understorey herbs (four forbs,
two grasses) varying in colonization rate. Besides performance and functional
traits, we will investigate flowering phenology, because of its correlation
with forest management for observational field data. We will correlate
phenotypic trait means and trait responses to experimental treatments, obtained
from the common garden experiments, with forest structure and microclimatic
variables. With the reciprocal transplant experiment we will explicitly test
for adaptation to forest management by adopting an Exploratory-scale transplant
design along a management intensity gradient.
Concluding, our project will contribute to understanding the impact
of forest management on phenotypic trait variation in forest understorey herbs.
Being an important level of biodiversity, phenotypic trait variation in forest
understorey herbs forms the basis for adaptation to future changes in forest
management and global climate.
Publications
There are no
publications from this project yet.