More than one third of Luxembourg's land surface is covered by forests. These provide important ecosystem functions for society and the economy. However, the health status of these forests has been declining severely in the past two decades. The proportion of undamaged trees in Luxembourg’s forests has more than halved, while that of severely damaged or dead trees has more than doubled over the past 20 years, according to regular forest surveys.
The “Forest function under stress” (FORFUS) is a dedicated doctoral training unit aiming to address the urgent societal need for science-based management recommendations for forests under increasing pressure, and to leverage the fast-developing expertise in multi-disciplinary forest research in Luxembourg. It consists of four inter-linked research clusters, focusing on below-ground processes, tree and canopy processes, remote sensing observations, and the prediction and valuation of forest functions.
Methods used will include field monitoring, field and lab experiments, remote sensing, data science including machine learning, and numerical modelling. We will hereby build on LIST's long-term eco-hydrological monitoring network and closely coordinate activities with the parallel project FORLUX, which will establish a dedicated forest monitoring network in collaboration with the City of Luxembourg and the ANF. We believe that intensified, coordinated and sustained multi-disciplinary research in local forests will dramatically improve our ability to detect emerging threats early and make well-informed management decisions for the future.
FORFUS is coordinated by LIST and co-hosted by the University of Luxembourg and LISER. It will combine 13 doctoral candidates and one postdoc investigating carbon, water and nutrient cycling in the soil, heat and water stress in the canopy, air pollution, new methods for observing forests using satellites and drones, and new approaches for the prediction and valuation of forest functions.
FORFUS will deliver ground-breaking multidisciplinary training to the next generation of forest researchers and managers by bringing together leading scientists from different disciplines involved in forest research and including national and international stakeholders from the start.
The broad involvement of national and international stakeholders and researchers (from 8 national and 15 international groups and institutions) will ensure that the research and training is of high societal and academic relevance in Luxembourg and beyond. New standards in Open Science practices will further enable broad participation in the scientific discourse and maximize the utility of the research methods and results emerging from FORFUS.
Research cluster RC1: The role of below-ground processes for forest functioning
RT1.1 | Soil compaction and tree roots (PD) | Post-Doc in Carbon Budgeting Strategies in Forest Soils | Christophe Hissler and Stanislaus Schymanski (LIST) |
RT1.2 | Forest soil drought and soil microbial diversity, physiology and carbon persistence | PhD on Forest Soil Drought and Soil Microbial Physiology and Carbon Persistence | Kate Buckeridge (LIST) |
RT1.3 | Trace element biogeochemistry in forests | PhD in BioChemistry | Christophe Hissler (LIST) |
RT1.4 | Stream carbon export from forested catchments | PhD in Experimental Hydrology | Nuria Martinez Carreras (LIST) |
RT1.5 | Tree-soil exchange model | coming soon |
Research cluster RC2: Tree and canopy processes
RT2.1 | Heat and drought-related stress and mortality in forests | PhD in Heat and Drought-related Stress and Mortality in Forests | Stanislaus Schymanski (LIST) |
RT2.2 | Exploring signatures of drought and heat stress across different pollutant deposition pathways | coming soon | Ivonne Trebs (LIST) |
Research cluster RC3: Observe forests from above
RT3.1 | Drought impacts on water- & light-use efficiency limits and forest ecosystem functioning through multi-sensor synergy | coming soon | Kaniska Mallick (LIST) |
RT3.2 | Multifrequency SAR-based forest height, soil moisture, and vegetation water content estimation | coming soon | Marco Chini (LIST) |
RT3.3 | Assessing the Impact of Air Pollution on Forest Trees across Luxembourg and Paving the Way for Future Mitigation | coming soon | Hichem Omrani (LISER) |
RT3.4 | Monitoring of plant traits for improved assessment of forest stress and disturbances in forests of the Greater Region | coming soon | Martin Schlerf (LIST) |
Research cluster RC4: Predict and value forests
RT4.1 | Model-guided assessment of forest resilience and vulnerability to climate change | coming soon | Mauro Sulis (LIST) |
RT4.2 | Modular Agent-based Modelling Platform of Forest Community Dynamics | coming soon | |
RT4.3 | Forest-based recreation: assessment and valuation for forest ecosystems under natural and human stress | coming soon | Thomas Schaubroeck and Claudio Petucco (LIST) |