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Dive into the research topics where Jurgen van Hal is active.

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Featured researches published by Jurgen van Hal.


The American Naturalist | 2010

Plant strategies in relation to resource supply in mesic to wet environments: does theory mirror nature?

Jenny C. Ordoñez; Peter M. van Bodegom; J.P.M. Witte; Ruud P. Bartholomeus; Jurgen van Hal; Rien Aerts

In ecology, strategy schemes based on propositions about the selection of plant attributes are common, but quantification of such schemes in relation to nutrient and water supply is lacking. Through structural equation modeling, we tested whether plant strategies related to nutrient and water/oxygen supply are reflected in a coordination of traits in natural communities. Structural equation models, based on accepted ecological concepts, were tested with measured plant traits of 105 different species across 50 sites in mesic to wet plant communities in the Netherlands. For each site, nutrient and water supply were measured and modeled. Hypothesized multivariate strategy models only partly reflected current theoretical schemes. Alternative models were consistent, showing that lack of consistency of the original models was because of (i) strong correlations among traits that supposedly belong to different strategy components; (ii) poor understanding of mechanisms determining the covariation of plant maximum height, leaf size, and stem density; and (iii) lack of integrative and long‐term measures of nutrient supply needed to predict coordinated plant trait responses. Our main conclusion is that a combination of trade‐offs (partly) across different plant organs and diverging effects of resource supply ultimately determines the coordination of plant traits needed to “make a living.”


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2012

Controls on Coarse Wood Decay in Temperate Tree Species: Birth of the LOGLIFE Experiment

Johannes H. C. Cornelissen; Ute Sass-Klaassen; Lourens Poorter; Koert G. van Geffen; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Jurgen van Hal; Leo Goudzwaard; Frank J. Sterck; René K. W. M. Klaassen; Grégoire T. Freschet; Annemieke van der Wal; Henk Eshuis; Juan Zuo; Wietse de Boer; Teun Lamers; Monique Weemstra; Vincent Cretin; Rozan Martin; Jan den Ouden; Matty P. Berg; Rien Aerts; G.M.J. Mohren; Mariet M. Hefting

Dead wood provides a huge terrestrial carbon stock and a habitat to wide-ranging organisms during its decay. Our brief review highlights that, in order to understand environmental change impacts on these functions, we need to quantify the contributions of different interacting biotic and abiotic drivers to wood decomposition. LOGLIFE is a new long-term ‘common-garden’ experiment to disentangle the effects of species’ wood traits and site-related environmental drivers on wood decomposition dynamics and its associated diversity of microbial and invertebrate communities. This experiment is firmly rooted in pioneering experiments under the directorship of Terry Callaghan at Abisko Research Station, Sweden. LOGLIFE features two contrasting forest sites in the Netherlands, each hosting a similar set of coarse logs and branches of 10 tree species. LOGLIFE welcomes other researchers to test further questions concerning coarse wood decay that will also help to optimise forest management in view of carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation.


Ecology and Evolution | 2014

Mapping nutrient resorption efficiencies of subarctic cryptogams and seed plants onto the Tree of Life

Simone I. Lang; Rien Aerts; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Wenka Schweikert; Thorsten Klahn; Helen M. Quested; Jurgen van Hal; Johannes H. C. Cornelissen

Nutrient resorption from senescing photosynthetic organs is a powerful mechanism for conserving nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) in infertile environments. Evolution has resulted in enhanced differentiation of conducting tissues to facilitate transport of photosynthate to other plant parts, ultimately leading to phloem. Such tissues may also serve to translocate N and P to other plant parts upon their senescence. Therefore, we hypothesize that nutrient resorption efficiency (RE, % of nutrient pool exported) should correspond with the degree of specialization of these conducting tissues across the autotrophic branches of the Tree of Life. To test this hypothesis, we had to compare members of different plant clades and lichens within a climatic region, to minimize confounding effects of climatic drivers on nutrient resorption. Thus, we compared RE among wide-ranging basal clades from the principally N-limited subarctic region, employing a novel method to correct for mass loss during senescence. Even with the limited numbers of species available for certain clades in this region, we found some consistent patterns. Mosses, lichens, and lycophytes generally showed low REN (<20%), liverworts and conifers intermediate (40%) and monilophytes, eudicots, and monocots high (>70%). REP appeared higher in eudicots and liverworts than in mosses. Within mosses, taxa with more efficient conductance also showed higher REN. The differences in REN among clades broadly matched the degree of specialization of conducting tissues. This novel mapping of a physiological process onto the Tree of Life broadly supports the idea that the evolution of conducting tissues toward specialized phloem has aided land plants to optimize their internal nitrogen recycling. The generality of evolutionary lines in conducting tissues and nutrient resorption efficiency needs to be tested across different floras in different climatic regions with different levels of N versus P availability.


Functional Ecology | 2016

Faunal community consequence of interspecific bark trait dissimilarity in early-stage decomposing logs

Juan Zuo; Matty P. Berg; Roy Klein; Jasper Nusselder; Gert Neurink; Orsi Decker; Mariet M. Hefting; Ute Sass-Klaassen; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Leo Goudzwaard; Jurgen van Hal; Frank J. Sterck; Lourens Poorter; Johannes H. C. Cornelissen

Dead tree trunks have significant ecosystem functions related to biodiversity and biogeochemical cycles. When lying on the soil surface, they are colonized by an array of invertebrate fauna, but what determines their community composition is still unclear. We apply community assembly theory to colonization of tree logs by invertebrates. During early decomposition, the attached bark is critically important as an environment filter for community assembly through habitat provision. Specifically, we hypothesized that the more dissimilar bark traits were between tree species, the more their faunal community compositions would differ. We tested this hypothesis by investigating the effects of bark traits on the invertebrate communities in the early-decomposing logs of 11 common, temperate tree species placed in the ‘common garden’ experiment LOGLIFE. Bark traits included bark looseness, fissure index, outer bark thickness, ratio of inner to outer bark thickness, punch resistance, water storage capacity and bark pH. The predominant faunal groups studied were Annelida, Isopoda, Chilopoda, Diplopoda, Diptera and Coleoptera. Our results showed (i) strong interspecific differences in bark traits, (ii) that bark traits related to environmental buffering had profound effects on the abundance of specific invertebrate groups, and (iii) the higher the overall bark trait dissimilarity between tree species, the more dissimilar these tree species were in faunal community composition, and the higher was the joint invertebrate family richness. A suite of bark traits together has fundamental afterlife effects on invertebrate community assembly, strongly filtering the colonizing invertebrates in early-decomposing logs, driving variation in their community composition and diversity. Our findings indicate that bark trait dissimilarity among tree species in forest stands is likely a better indicator of early-phase dead trunk fauna diversity than tree species diversity per se. A lay summary is available for this article.


Ecology and Evolution | 2018

Nonadditive effects of consumption in an intertidal macroinvertebrate community are independent of food availability but driven by complementarity effects

Emily M. van Egmond; Peter M. van Bodegom; Jurgen van Hal; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Matty P. Berg; Rien Aerts

Abstract Suboptimal environmental conditions are ubiquitous in nature and commonly drive the outcome of biological interactions in community processes. Despite the importance of biological interactions for community processes, knowledge on how species interactions are affected by a limiting resource, for example, low food availability, remains limited. Here, we tested whether variation in food supply causes nonadditive consumption patterns, using the macroinvertebrate community of intertidal sandy beaches as a model system. We quantified isotopically labeled diatom consumption by three macroinvertebrate species (Bathyporeia pilosa, Haustorius arenarius, and Scolelepis squamata) kept in mesocosms in either monoculture or a three‐species community at a range of diatom densities. Our results show that B. pilosa was the most successful competitor in terms of consumption at both high and low diatom density, while H. arenarius and especially S. squamata consumed less in a community than in their respective monocultures. Nonadditive effects on consumption in this macroinvertebrate community were present and larger than mere additive effects, and similar across diatom densities. The underlying species interactions, however, did change with diatom density. Complementarity effects related to niche‐partitioning were the main driver of the net diversity effect on consumption, with a slightly increasing contribution of selection effects related to competition with decreasing diatom density. For the first time, we showed that nonadditive effects of consumption are independent of food availability in a macroinvertebrate community. This suggests that, in communities with functionally different, and thus complementary, species, nonadditive effects can arise even when food availability is low. Hence, at a range of environmental conditions, species interactions hold important potential to alter ecosystem functioning.


Biogeosciences Discussions | 2018

Filtering artefacts in bacterial community composition can affect the outcome of dissolved organic matter biolability assays

Joshua F. Dean; Jurgen van Hal; Han Dolman; Rien Aerts; James T. Weedon

Inland waters are large contributors to global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, in part due to the vulnerability of dissolved organic matter (DOM) to microbial decomposition and respiration to CO2 during transport through aquatic systems. To assess the degree of this vulnerability, aquatic DOM is often incubated in standardized ‘biolability’ assays. These assays isolate the dissolved fraction of aquatic OM by size filtration prior to incubation. We test whether this size 10 selection has an impact on the bacterial community composition and the consequent dynamics of DOM degradation using three different filtering strategies: 0.2 μm (filtered-and-inoculated), 0.7 μm (generally the most common DOM filter size) and 106 μm (‘unfiltered’). We found that bacterial community composition, based on 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, was significantly affected by the different filter sizes. At the same time, filtering strategy also affected the DOM degradation dynamics. However, the dynamics of these two responses were decoupled, suggesting that filtration primarily influences 15 biolability assays through bacterial abundance and the presence of their associated predators. By the end of the 41-day incubations all treatments tended to converge on a common total DOM biolability level, with the 0.7 μm filtered incubations reaching this point the quickest. These results suggest that assays to assess the total biolability of aquatic DOM should last long enough to remove filtration artefacts in the microbial population. Filtering strategy should also be taken into account when comparing results across biolability assays. 20


Global Change Biology | 2012

A frozen feast: thawing permafrost increases plant-available nitrogen in subarctic peatlands

Frida Keuper; Peter M. van Bodegom; Ellen Dorrepaal; James T. Weedon; Jurgen van Hal; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Rien Aerts


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2011

Traits explain the responses of a sub-arctic Collembola community to climate manipulation

Marika Makkonen; Matty P. Berg; Jurgen van Hal; Terry V. Callaghan; Malcolm C. Press; Rien Aerts


Journal of Ecology | 2012

Interspecific differences in wood decay rates: insights from a new short‐term method to study long‐term wood decomposition

Grégoire T. Freschet; James T. Weedon; Rien Aerts; Jurgen van Hal; J.H.C. Cornelissen


Global Change Biology | 2012

Summer warming accelerates sub-arctic peatland nitrogen cycling without changing enzyme pools or microbial community structure.

James T. Weedon; George A. Kowalchuk; Rien Aerts; Jurgen van Hal; Richard S. P. van Logtestijn; Neslihan Taş; Wilfred F.M. Röling; Peter M. van Bodegom

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Rien Aerts

VU University Amsterdam

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Juan Zuo

VU University Amsterdam

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Frida Keuper

VU University Amsterdam

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Leo Goudzwaard

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Ute Sass-Klaassen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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