Our research project was one of the ten funded Forefront projects by the National Research, Development and Innovation Office in 2022. This gives us a unique opportunity for strengthening our group and for studying our beloved research topics in the next five years. The project will start soon, from 1st October :)
The title of the project is ‘Grassland restoration based on nature-based solutions in agricultural landscapes: drivers at micro- and macro-scales’. The topic of the project aligns well to the current global and European policies, that have ambitious plans for supporting habitat restoration in agricultural landscapes. The Frontline project aims to provide a comprehensive framework for utilizing nature-based solutions in the restoration of semi-natural grasslands and in creating multifunctional agricultural landscapes. The ambition is a multi-scale and multi-site research program that by answering theoretical ecological questions provides evidence-based solutions for strategic restoration planning and for fine-tuning the agri-environmental schemes. The novelty of our work is that we will combine approaches of large-scale multi-site vegetation surveys with landscape ecology, seed ecology and historical ecology. First, we use a multi-site chronosequence approach and study the spontaneous and assisted grassland recovery in agricultural landscapes. We sample the vegetation in 300 recovering sites and evaluate diversity and species composition patterns as a function of small-scale environmental heterogeneity, landscape context and recovery time. Second, we analyze the temporal (seed bank) and spatial (seed rain) components of seed dispersal and test the effect of the local and landscape factors on the availability of seed sources. Finally, we study whether seeds from the seed sources can achieve successful establishment in the aboveground vegetation and test the importance of plant functional traits, landscape- and environmental filters in the establishment process from the seed sources in the recovery process. We aim to develop and test seed-based restoration methods for overcoming establishment limitation. The research will identify optimal settings of local and landscape factors where recovery is the most promising and support restoration prioritization by determining where we can rely on spontaneous recovery processes and where we need active restoration measures.
Wednesday, 21 September 2022
Our 'Forefront' project received funding - our new research will start soon
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