R. (Robert) Timmers MSc

Hugo R. Kruytgebouw
Padualaan 8
Kamer N302
3584 CH Utrecht

R. (Robert) Timmers MSc

PhD Candidate
Ecology and Biodiversity
+31 30 253 7384
r.timmers@uu.nl

The contribution of plant-animal interactions to biodiversity and ecosystem restoration of the Atlantic forest

Across the world old-growth forests are rapidly diminishing due to anthropogenic forest conversion. Simultaneously, forest recovery in human-modified landscapes has led to an increase of secondary forests, which may have the potential to mitigate loss of biodiversity and provide important ecosystem services. Human impacts regulate both tree and animal abundances, but in a different way, so that in restored fragments novel communities (in terms of plant-animal interactions) are likely to develop. Important landscape characteristics such as surrounding land-use and surrounding native forest cover are likely to greatly affect the composition and functioning of these novel communities, by altering the influx of frugivorous animals, tree seeds and genotypes from neighbouring forests. This project addresses the complex interactions between plants and animals that enable ecosystem functioning and the provisioning of ecosystem services including carbon sequestration.

 

We will quantify to what extent landscape connectivity affects restoration outcomes in terms of functional plant-frugivore relationships and cascading effects on carbon storage, population-level tree recruitment and genetic diversity and biodiversity conservation value in novel communities in the São Paulo Atlantic forest region. Based on our findings, we will identify priority areas within the Atlantic forest region that are most suitable for natural regeneration, and develop restoration guidelines to promote plant-frugivore interactions that enhance biodiversity and carbon sequestration where needed.

 

 

Team: Prof. Merel Soons (Utrecht University, The Netherlands), Dr. Marina Côrtes (UNESP, Rio Claro), Dr. Marijke van Kuijk (Utrecht University), Dr. Marco Pizo (UNESP, Rio Claro), Dr. Mathias Pires (UNICAMP, Campinas), Prof. Jaboury Ghazoul (ETH Zurich).

 

This project is part of the NWO-FAPESP joint Call ‘Ecosystem restoration: the Brazilian Atlantic Forest as a case study’: For information on the other projects visit:  https://www.nwo.nl/en/news-and-events/news/2019/06/four-projects-funded-within-nwo-fapesp-joint-call.html


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