Martin Dovciak🌳🌻

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Professor, SUNY ESF🌳NSF Mid-Career Award🍀Editor, Ecological Applications🎋Past Chair, ESA Vegetation Section (2021-2023)🍁Fellow, Yale School of the Environment (Fall 2023)🌱Ecology🌻Botany🌲Forests🦋Biodiversity⛅️Climate Change
Websitehttps://www.esf.edu/faculty/dovciak
LocationSyracuse, New York State, USA
Congratulations to Dr. Joanna Lumbsden-Pinto on receiving the Outstanding PhD Scholar Award & completing her PhD studies @ SUNY ESF. Her work on pine barrens ecology helps us understand, manage, & conserve this unique ecosystem of the northeastern USA (stay tuned for the papers!). It was a pleasure to serve as Joanna’s advisor over the past few years & to celebrate her many accomplishments this past week. Where one journey ends, another begins. Good luck in all your future endeavors Joanna!
Trout Lily (Erythronium americanum) in full bloom this weekend in upstate New York. As a spring ephemeral, this species produces flowers, fruits, & seeds before temperate deciduous tree canopy above leafs out, & it dies back afterward.
Sharp-lobed hepatica (Hepatica or Anemone acutiloba) is still sporting last year’s foliage, while its pretty new flowers announce that true springtime arrived to Upstate New York at last. Did you know that the Cherokee used this plant to make tea to cure cough? Happy International Plant Appreciation Day!
🎉 Congratulations to Rachel Hopkins on her succesfull MSc defense & excellent seminar “Plants on the move: Tracking 60 years of vegetation shifts on Whiteface Mountain, New York State” @ SUNY ESF. We celebrated hers & other lab members’ recent accomplishments with yummy Mexican food. Stay tuned for the papers! 🌳🌲🌱🪻⛰️
Congratulations to our new MS student in the lab, Danny Wehner, for receiving a competitive departmental Lowe-Wilcox Graduate Fellowship at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry (SUNY ESF) to support his field research on the effects of mycorrhiza on tree seedling establishment across montane-temperate forest ecotones in NE US. Well done Danny!
👏Very proud of my PhD student, Joanna Lumbsden-Pinto, who successfully defended her dissertation today on "Patterns & Drivers of Vegetation Change in Pine Barren Ecosystems in the Northeastern United States" @ SUNY ESF! Congratulations Dr. Lumbsden-Pinto! 🏆

💡New paper❗️Turns out that while overstory forest 🌳 composition varies with soil pH & climate, sapling composition tends to gravitate toward beech, especially so where overstory beech died & soil Al is high. Kudos to Mike Zarfos for this PhD work @ SUNY ESF

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10021-024-00930-z

Environmental Change Drivers Reduce Sapling Layer Diversity in Sugar Maple-Beech Forests of Eastern North America - Ecosystems

A century of beech bark disease (BBD) in North America has transformed hardwood forests by reducing the canopy biomass of American beech (Fagus grandifolia), even as beech has come to dominate the sapling layer of many forests. We do not understand the extent to which environmental change drivers such as climate, acidic atmospheric deposition (and its legacy of acidified soils), and invasive disease (BBD) may have contributed to this transformation. We investigated how BBD effects and tree community composition varied along a well-documented soil acidity gradient in the northeastern United States. We surveyed overstory and sapling layer tree species composition, BBD effects, and soil chemistry on 30 watersheds in forests co-dominated by beech and sugar maple (Acer saccharum). We analyzed potential drivers of community composition, BBD, and beech sapling density using linear models and non-metric multidimensional scaling. Predictors accounted for soil chemistry, climate, overstory beech (importance value, IV), mortality, and BBD defect. Overall overstory species composition varied most along the acidity gradient, while beech and BBD severity varied along their own distinct environmental gradient. Species composition of the overstory and sapling layers diverged significantly, with the latter dominated by beech. Beech sapling density was positively related to the proportion of standing dead overstory beech and soil exchangeable aluminum, but was unrelated to the overall proportion of overstory beech or their BBD severity. The dominance of sapling layers by beech may have resulted from a gradual accumulation of canopy-opening events precipitated by BBD and sugar maple decline, the latter driven by stressors such as acidification and climate change.

SpringerLink
🧐Have you ever wondered if the interactions among 🌳 seedlings🌱 & mycorrhizal 🍄 facilitate or impede 🌳migrations under changing climate❓If so, check out the new paper in Ecological Monographs lead by Jordon Tourville @ SUNY ESF. Congrats Jordon! https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ecm.1634
I enjoyed giving a talk @ IUFRO World Forest Congress in Stockholm (#IUFRO2024) today about our lab's research on climate-induced changes in forest plant communities along elevation gradients of the northeastern US. Looking forward to hopefully come back to the next World Congress in five years in Kenya!
An excellent #IUFRO2024 field trip 10 on Conservation & Forestry in Practice lead by the Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture & Forestry. We learned much about the contemporary issues & history of Swedish forestry. 🧪🌎