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06/04/2018 14:36

iDiv research centre continues to grow: Dutch evolutionary biologist sets up new junior research gr

Tilo Arnhold Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Deutsches Zentrum für integrative Biodiversitätsforschung (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig

    Leipzig. The German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) continues to grow. As of June, the Dutch biologist Dr Renske Emilie Onstein will head up a new “Evolution and Adaptation” junior research group with offices and laboratories based in Leipzig’s Bio City. Using flowering plants and fruit-eating animals, the botanist and her team will investigate how species originate and which factors influence this process. This knowledge is important to predict how biological diversity might adapt to global change.

    Renske Onstein investigates interactions that occur between different organisms, such as between plants and fruit-eating animals. When such interactions, which have developed over long periods of time, are suddenly disrupted, it is to be expected that this will also have an impact on evolution. “I am interested in the effect that the extinction of giant lemurs had on the flora in Madagascar, for example,” explains Onstein. “Nowadays, only smaller relatives of these primates still exist. It is assumed that this has feedback effects on large fruit-bearing plants such as palm trees whose seeds are no longer dispersed by large animals. Have these palms trees found a replacement for the large primates? Has evolution created a solution to this problem over the last few centuries? Answers to these questions are important as they allow us to predict how biological diversity might adapt to current and future global change.” Onstein is also investigating the influence of plant traits, climate and vegetation on species numbers in various regions. The main focus will be on plants from tropical rainforests and Mediterranean climates. Tropical and Mediterranean biomes have the greatest species diversity, and they are distributed across various continents, which allows for comparing the evolutionary histories of plants in different regions. The genetic material of samples collected from all over the world will be analysed in the laboratory in Leipzig with the use of modern molecular biological techniques. The group is the twelfth research group and the fifth junior research group based at the iDiv core centre in Leipzig.

    The leader of the new junior research group, Renske Onstein, most recently worked at the Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics at the University of Amsterdam. She wrote her doctoral thesis on the evolutionary biology of flowering plants in the Cenozoic period at the University of Zurich where she was awarded her PhD with distinction. With a grant from the Swiss National Fund (SNF), she then went on to work at Paris-Sud University. Onstein specialised in flowering plants (Angiosperms) in regions ranging from tropical rainforests to Mediterranean ecosystems. She conducted research at a number of botanical gardens and carried out fieldwork in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe and Latin America.

    Interview with Renske Onstein:
    https://www.idiv.de/en/groups_and_people/core_groups/evolution_and_adaptation/in...

    Links:
    https://www.idiv.de/de/gruppen_und_personen/kerngruppen/evolution_und_adataption...
    https://onsteinison.wordpress.com/

    Further Information:

    Dr Renske Emilie Onstein
    Head of the junior research group „Evolution and Adaptation”, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig
    Tel.: +49 341 9733 -129
    https://www.idiv.de/en/groups_and_people/core_groups/evolution_and_adaptation.ht...
    as well as
    Tilo Arnhold
    iDiv Media and Communications
    Tel.: +49 341 9733 -197
    https://www.idiv.de/en/groups_and_people/central_management/media_and_communicat...

    iDiv - HOTSPOT IN BIODIVERSITY SCIENCE
    Follow us on twitter: twitter.com/idiv
    iDiv is a research centre of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG).
    iDiv is a central facility of the University of Leipzig within the meaning of Section 92 (1) of the Act on Academic Freedom in Higher Education in Saxony (Sächsisches Hochschulfreiheitsgesetz, SächsHSFG). It is run together with the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg and the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, as well as in cooperation with the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ.
    The following non-university research institutions are involved as cooperation partners: the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry (MPI BGC), the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology (MPI CE), the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology (MPI EVA), the Leibniz Institute DSMZ-German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, the Leibniz Institute of Plant Biochemistry (IPB), the Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research (IPK) and the Leibniz Institute Senckenberg Museum of Natural History Görlitz (SMNG).
    www.idiv.de


    More information:

    https://www.idiv.de/en/news/news_single_view/news_article/idiv_researc.html


    Images

    As of June, the Dutch biologist Dr Renske Emilie Onstein will head up a new “Evolution and Adaptation” junior research group at iDiv.
    As of June, the Dutch biologist Dr Renske Emilie Onstein will head up a new “Evolution and Adaptatio ...
    Photo: private
    None


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists
    Biology, Environment / ecology
    transregional, national
    Organisational matters, Personnel announcements
    English


     

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