After growing up mostly in the Canarian islands, Spain, I moved to Tromsø, Norway and fell in love, particularly with the nature here. The outdoors have always inspired my curiosity in biology, and so it has been a great blessing to live in a place where I can see and touch what I work with every day. My masters was written in plant ecology, with some ECTS in freshwater ecology. This inspired my ambition towards getting a holistic understanding on the connectivity between these two habitats.
In my PhD project I will look into how terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems connect via the reciprocal flux of biomass, for example as emerging aquatic insects in spring and summer and as the downfall of senesced leaves in autumn. This ecosystem connectivity is described in temperate ecosystems, but is understudied in the Arctic. With a warming climate, the invasive dwarf shrub Empetrun nigrum is also becoming increasingly abundant. Higher temperatures are also leading to a heightened production of secondary metabolites of E. nigrum that have a documented detrimental effect on salmon alevins and zooplankton. I aim at closing the knowledge gap around how terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems are linked in Arctic ecosystems, as well as how transport of secondary metabolites from Empetrum nigrum (for example through the spring flood) may impact ecosystem functioning in streams. In this, my main focus is on aquatic insects and filamentous algae.