I am an evolutionary ecologist and science communicator and live at the Abisko Scientific Research Station, where I am the Project Coordinator for the Climate Impacts Research Centre. I am interested in how life history adaptations in Arctic and alpine species are shaped by the environment.
Special focus within my research lies in studying the importance of organic matter (humic substances) and nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) for lake ecosystem productivity and food web structure.
My research focuses on biogeochemical processes in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems with special emphasis climate change effects in arctic and boreal environments.
My research aims at creating a new framework for understanding, quantifying and predicting the regional-scale sediment carbon sink in high latitude lakes, and its sensitivity to climate change.
My research focuses on the controls over ecosystem structure and functioning in streams, rivers, and watersheds. We study these systems to understand their condition as natural resources, but also as models to test general ecological and biogeochemical principles.
My research interest deals with the effect of plant-herbivore interactions on plant community composition and processes in arctic and alpine ecosystems.
I am a plant ecologist with a passion for the ecosystems of cold areas. I am fascinated by their characteristic plant communities and by the plants’ abilities to survive harsh conditions through manipulation of their neighbours and their micro-environment.
The core of my research is to gain a spatial understanding of Arctic carbon dynamics in plants and soils. In my postdoc, I use drones to investigate seasonal changes in tundra vegetation.
I am an ecosystem ecologist with a passion for high latitude ecosystems and am interested in the interplay of plants and their environment, specifically belowground.