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Research at EECRG


The major research aim of the Ecological and Environmental Change Research Group (EECRG) is to study ecological and environmental change over a range of temporal (10-10000 years) and spatial scales (small areas to continents).

Coring in the Arctic

Coring in the Arctic

It attempts to set contemporary ecological and environmental patterns and processes in the context of longer time-scale variability. Its primary goal is to reconstruct the past, study the present, and model the future and to study, quantify, and understand the natural variability of ecosystems and the environment and the multi-layered and ever-increasing impact of human activity on ecosystems. There are both strong quantitative and qualitative components, close interactions between modern ecological research, cultural landscape ecology, palaeoecological and palaeoclimatological studies, and predictive modelling and spatial approaches, and hence major links between "pure" and "applied" science and societal and nature conservation concerns. It builds on the broad vision of ecological change and landscape history pioneered by Knut Fægri.

It is the only research group in Scandinavia where modern ecological processes and patterns, statistical modelling, quantitative data analysis, Quaternary palaeoecology, and environmental change are studied together, unified by common concerns for quantification, rigorous project design, explicit hypothesis testing, mechanistic understanding of observed patterns, and inter-disciplinary integration. Organisms studied include vascular plants, bryophytes, lichens, diatoms, chironomids, oribatid mites, pollen grains and spores, plant macrofossils (seeds and fruits), and bark beetles. Our research can be split into two main themes - climate-related and biodiversity-related. EECRG members are also investigators in a number of NFR-funded projects (follow Projects tab above).

EECRG currently includes 9 permanent staff, 1 professor II, 8 post-doctoral or research fellows, 15 doctoral students, and 14 MSc students within the Department of Biology. Because research on ecological and environmental change is strongly multi-disciplinary, the EECRG also has close collaboration with researchers at the Bergen Museum (Torbjørg Bjelland, Kari Loe Hjelle, Mary Losvik, Gaute Velle, Bjarte Jordal), the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research (Anne Bjune), and Department of Geography (Ole Reidar Vetaas), all of whom are scientific members of the EECRG. It also has links with the Systematics Research Group within the Department of Biology.

EECRG has ongoing research and scientific collaboration in Norway, throughout Europe, North America, Costa Rica, Patagonia, Greenland, North Africa, and the Himalaya. It has attracted research funding from, for example, NFR, European Union, NATO, Nordic Council of Ministers, Swiss National Science Foundation, and the UK NERC. It hosted three EU Marie Curie Training Sites and an EU Research Training Network.

 

Heidi working on Invaliens project

Last updated 30.3.2011