Project: Climate change in cities: impact of the urban heat island on microclimate, biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in urban forests
2019-11-01 – 2023-10-31
- Abstract
Forests are biodiversity hotspots and provide a multitude of ecosystem services. An important characteristic of forests is their microclimate beneath the canopy layer, which buffers temperatures. The forest microclimate provides favourable conditions for understorey species, which are sensitive to climate warming. Some ecosystem functions are strongly driven by temperature, e.g. litter decomposition. Urban areas are characterised by increased temperatures compared to rural areas, a phenomenon referred to as the urban heat island effect. How this heat island affects the forest microclimate, biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in urban forests is unclear, whereas it provides a unique opportunity to gain insight in the effects of global warming. In this research project, I will first assess the microclimatic buffering in urban forests. Secondly, I will investigate the impact of the urban heat island on understorey plant communities and, thirdly, on litter decomposition. These three topics will be studied in an innovative design along three spatial climate scales: (1) a European latitudinal gradient, (2) a regional urbanisation gradient, (3) a local forest structure gradient. The results of this study will provide novel insights on the impact of the urban heat island and climate change on forest microclimates, biodiversity and ecosystem functioning, being highly relevant for forest managers, conservationists, as well as urban planners and policymakers.
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Microclimate of large solitary trees along rural-to-urban gradients across Europe
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Variation in insect herbivory across an urbanization gradient : the role of abiotic factors and leaf secondary metabolites
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Microclimate, an important part of ecology and biogeography
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Unexpected westward range shifts in European forest plants link to nitrogen deposition
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Dataset for De Pauw et al. (2024) Nutrient-demanding and thermophilous plants dominate urban forest edge vegetation across temperate Europe
(2024) -
- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Nutrient‐demanding and thermophilous plants dominate urban forest‐edge vegetation across temperate Europe
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
The urban heat island accelerates litter decomposition through microclimatic warming in temperate urban forests
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Forest understorey flowering phenology responses to experimental warming and illumination
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Using warming tolerances to predict understory plant responses to climate change
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Data on litter decomposition experiment in six urban forests
(2023)