Dr Martin Bader
Qualifications:
- PhD in Plant Ecology, University of Basel, Switzerland
- MSc in Plant Ecophysiology, University of Waikato, New Zealand
- MSc in Geography, Saarland University, Germany
Research Interests:
- Plant eco(physio)logy
- Global Change Ecology
- Dendrochronology/dendroecology
- Plant–insect interactions
Publications:
- Bader, M. K.-F., Siegwolf, R. & Körner, C. (2010) Sustained enhancement of photosynthesis in mature deciduous forest trees after 8 years of free air CO2 enrichment (FACE). Planta, 232, 1115-1125.
- Bader, M. K.-F. & Körner, C. (2010) No overall stimulation of soil respiration under mature deciduous forest trees after 7 years of CO2 enrichment. Global Change Biology, 16, 2830-2843.
- Bader, M., Hiltbrunner, E. & Körner, C. (2009) Fine root responses of mature deciduous forest trees to free air carbon dioxide enrichment (FACE). Functional Ecology, 23, 913-921.
- Bystriakova, N., Bader M., Coomes D. (2011) Long-term tree fern dynamics linked to disturbance and shade tolerance. Journal of Vegetation Science, 22, 72-84.
- Dulamsuren, C., Hauck, M., Bader, M., Osokhjargal, D. Oyungerel, S., Nyambayar, S., Runge, M. & Leuschner, C. (2009) Water relations and photosynthetic performance in Larix sibirica growing in the forest-steppe ecotone of northern Mongolia. Tree Physiology, 29, 99-110.
- Dulamsuren, C., Hauck, M., Nyambayar, S., Bader, M., Osokhjargal, D., Oyungerel, S. & Leuschner, C. (2009) Performance of Siberian elm (Ulmus pumila) on steppe slopes of the northern Mongolian mountain taiga: Drought stress and herbivory in mature trees. Environmental and Experimental Botany, 66, 18-24.
- Dulamsuren, C., Hauck, M., Bader, M., Oyungerel, S., Osokhjargal, D., Nyambayar, S. & Leuschner, C. (2009) The different strategies of Pinus sylvestris and Larix sibirica to deal with summer drought in a northern Mongolian forest-steppe ecotone suggest a future superiority of pine in a warming climate. Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 39, 2520-2528.
|
Centre of Excellence for Climate Change Woodland and Forest Health
|




Sister Sites



|