24 May 2023

VOLT research wins Haldane prize

Thuidium peruvianum shoot at ×200 magnification under UV-fluorescence microscope. Nostoc sp. colonies are seen in bright red between moss leaf and stem in green (credit: Aya Permin)
Thuidium peruvianum shoot at ×200 magnification under UV-fluorescence microscope. Nostoc sp. colonies are seen in bright red between moss leaf and stem in green (credit: Aya Permin)

Our article ”High nitrogen-fixing rates associated with ground-covering mosses in a tropical mountain cloud forest will decrease drastically in a future climate” published in the journal Functional Ecology has won the Haldane prize 2022!

The work was a collaboration between VOLT members and colleagues from Sweden and the UK. Here, we quantified for the first time nitrogen (N) fixation by cyanobacteria colonizing mosses and liverworts in tropical montane cloud forests in Peru. We show that N fixation rates are comparable to other N input sources in these ecosystems, and that drought as a result of climate change will have a strong, negative impact on this ecosystem function.

 

 

You can read the scientific article here

You can also read the story published in Functional Ecologists, where Aya Permin discusses her paper.

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