Elly is a member of the Ecosystem and Landscape Dynamics (ELD) group within the Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED). Elly is a soil ecologist interested in the interaction between plant communities and soil communities including micro- and macro-fauna. Her strength lies in analyzing and understanding interactions in multi-community data to unravel transition effects in natural systems. She is primarily a fundamental scientist interested in the mechanisms that drive these transitions in plant- and soil communities. However, she is also involved in teaching in the bachelor FPS and the master Earth sciences, within the track Environmental management and the track Future Planet Ecosystem Sciences.
I am a soil ecologist working with soil scientists. This puts me in a bridging position between disciplines in which I want to fill the knowledge gap on the contribution of soil biota in stabilizing organic matter in soil. This is of high importance for global carbon storage to mitigate climate change effects but also for a healthy cycling of nutrients. Creative and not linear thinking cross-disciplinary will eventually lead to new discoveries that contribute to solve future problems on earth. I am an enthusiastic teacher in the interdisciplinary bachelor Future Planet Studies and in the master Earth Sciences. I stimulate students to think outside the box and come up with innovative solutions for major future problems on earth. Next to my high impact papers and my papers in top-ecology journals, I have a very good track-record in presenting at international conferences. I also participate actively in the scientific community by serving as associate editor at Functional Ecology, being an active reviewer at a broad scope of journals, and serving on external PhD-exam committees. I have put effort in translating my scientific message into short articles and news items for the general public to highlight the relevance of my research for nature restoration of degraded lands. I hope this engagement leads to applicable innovations that actually help to restore degraded soils, soils that we so desperately need to feed the 9 billion people on Earth.
Next to research I teach:
1. In the bachelor FPS (major aardwetenschappen) in the courses Toekomstperspectief voor de aarde, Plant-Soil Interactions in Agriculture, Plant-soil interactions practical and Desertification and Land Degradation. Besides the coaching of bachelor students during their bachelor project, see under "Student projects".
2. In the master Earth sciences I teach in the course Environmental management strategies (course coordinator 2020), Biogeochemical cycles (track Enivronmental Sciences) and Grand Challenges of human-ecosystem interactions (track Future Planet Ecosystem Sciences). Besides, I have guide some students during their masters project, see under "Student projects".
November 2019 — Present
Assistant professor in soil carbon cycling at the University of Amsterdam (UvA), Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED), Department of Ecosystem and Landscape Dynamics (ELD).
November 2015 — November 2019
Post-doctoral research from VENI-NWO at the University of Amsterdam (UvA), Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED), Ecosystem and Landscape Dynamics (ELD) research group. Topic: Finding mechanisms that drive secondary succession in plant and soil communities. Advisor: Prof. dr. P.C. de Ruiter.
October 2011 — November 2015
Post-doctoral research at the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), department of Terrestrial Ecology within European project EcoFINDERS. Topic: Linking soil community structure and nutrient cycling in a chronosequence of abandoned agricultural fields. Advisor: Prof. Dr. Ir. W.H. van der Putten.
September 2005 — September 2011
PhD research at the Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), department of Terrestrial Ecology. Topic: Climate induced range-expanding plants: above- and belowground interactions. Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Ir. W.H. van der Putten.
June 2005 — August 2005
Researcher “Invasion biology” at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, department of Animal Ecology. Supervisor: Dr. M.P. Berg.
September 2005 — September 2011
September 1999 — May 2005
Masterproject 1: Optimizing a protocol with spectroscopy methods to quickly asses aggregate stability
Supervisor/examiner: Elly Morriën, second assessor: Erik Cammeraat from May 2020
Carbon stabilization in soils is of essential importance for agricultural practices, a healthy soil life and to prevent leakage to the groundwater of essential plant nutrients. Carbon in soils can be stabilized in roughly two ways: binding to the organo-mineral fraction (mineral associated organic matter MAOM) and physical protected organic matter locked in soil aggregates (particulate organic matter POM). The fraction of carbon that can be bound to minerals depends on the type of mineral surface, surface charge, soil type, pH etc. This can be targeted by proper management of the land. The physical protected fraction can be large and has a great potential for optimization (Cotrufo et al. 2019). However, many fundamental information is lacking ion how to increase the stable POM-fraction. We have for example little information on the stability, turnover and dynamics of soil aggregates. It seems that microaggregates are more stable robust entities which form the building blocks for larger macro-aggregates (Totsche et al. 2018). (Le Bissonnais, 1996).
I can also place a student that monitors aggregate stability for the different treatments or optimizes measurements for aggregate stability by trying out different methods and comparing results, f.e. compare wet sieving methods with FTIR or Vis-NIR spectroscopy measurements.
Masterproject 2: Are there specific molecular structures of POM inside aggregates? Separating larger biotic structures from organic particles using microscopy and chemical techniques.
Supervisor/examiner: Elly Morriën, second assessor: Boris Jansen from September 2020
Carbon stabilization in soils is of essential importance for agricultural practices, a healthy soil life and to prevent leakage to the groundwater of essential plant nutrients. Carbon in soils can be stabilized in roughly two ways: binding to the organo-mineral fraction (mineral associated organic matter MAOM) and physical protected organic matter locked in soil aggregates (particulate organic matter POM). The fraction of carbon that can be bound to minerals depends on the type of mineral surface, surface charge, soil type, pH etc. This can be targeted by proper management of the land. The physical protected fraction can be large and has a great potential for optimization (Cotrufo et al. 2019). However, many fundamental information is lacking ion how to increase the stable POM-fraction.
Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy (CLSM) (sensu Probandt et al 2017) on auto-fluorescent samples (no preparation needed) running time-lapses for one to two months in a row (sensu Morris et al. 2019). I already analysed some of the soils we want to include and there is plenty of auto-fluorencence of organic material in the sample. The combination of molecular analysis of stable POM material inside the aggregates, relating to the reflectance patterns will allow us to count these particles in small volumes. In that way we can also quantify the effect of certain management practices on particular organic carbon sources. we will unravel the macromolecular composition of the organic matter using pyrolysis-GC/MS (Nierop & Jansen 2009). time I can unravel which molecular composition of organic matter is emitting auto-fluoresence at which wavelengths and count it in small volumes with the CLSM. I can then see whether this can also be used for field estimations.
Masterproject 3: measuring ‘sticky substances’ EPS/GRSP from microbes that form aggregates
Supervisor/examiner: Elly Morriën, second assessor: Shixiu Zhang from April 2020
Carbon stabilization in soils is of essential importance for agricultural practices, a healthy soil life and to prevent leakage to the groundwater of essential plant nutrients. Carbon in soils can be stabilized in roughly two ways: binding to the organo-mineral fraction (mineral associated organic matter MAOM) and physical protected organic matter locked in soil aggregates (particulate organic matter POM). The fraction of carbon that can be bound to minerals depends on the type of mineral surface, surface charge, soil type, pH etc. This can be targeted by proper management of the land. The physical protected fraction can be large and has a great potential for optimization (Cotrufo et al. 2019). However, many fundamental information is lacking ion how to increase the stable POM-fraction. We have for example little information on the stability, turnover and dynamics of soil aggregates. It seems that microaggregates are more stable robust entities which form the building blocks for larger macro-aggregates (Totsche et al. 2018).
Aggregates are lumps of soil particles, microbes and organic matter (Lehmann et al. 2017). These lumps stick together due to the root exudates, which predominantly consist of polysaccharides (Baumert et al. 2018). This triggers microbes to secrete enzymes and other Extracellular Polymeric Substances (EPS) that act as some sort of glue. Also hyphal fungi release substances which are generally known as glomalin which seem to perform a similar sort of gluing function, but are more recently carefully renamed in Glomalin Related Soil Proteins (GRSPs) (Fokom et al. 2012). I want to compare EPS and GRSP production under different agricultural land use.
A farmers cooperation in Holwerd, Ecolana, and a farmer in Hem (NH), Wim Reus both farming on sea clay provide opportunities to create a living lab on their fields. Amsterdam Green Campus together with van Hall Larenstein, Leeuwarden (University of Applied Sciences) wrote a proposal which is submitted to the province of Groningen, Friesland and Noord-Holland to get 4 years of funding for continuous measurements on soil quality, biodiversity, water quality, emissions and meadow bird monitoring. We want to assess the effect of closing nutrient-cycles by using manure produced by local farms, mix it with crop residues and apply it as solid manure on cropland of local farmers. These farmers grow potato’s, cauliflower, onions and beetroot. Applying solid manure with crop residues/wheat-straw, has the advantage of emitting less ammonium, increase soil carbon stocks and improve crop health and -nutrition. The results of this test on clay soils will provide the first input for management guidelines to reduce nitrogen emissions, increase soil carbon, increase above- and belowground biodiversity and increase the quality and quantity of the harvest on clay soils. Closing nutrient cycles, nature inclusive soil management and reducing the use of artificial fertilizers are the way forward in future agriculture.
We seek highly motivated bachelor student(s) who can, from March – June 2021 perform start measurements from the current situation before the treatments are applied. This can be done in location Hem only, or expanded towards the locations in the north of Friesland. The student will collect soil samples from fields at the start of the growing season and measure total microbial biomass (fumigation extraction), ergosterol (fungal biomass only), perform basic microbial soil functions with Ecoplates to examine potential breakdown of 31 carbohydrates (earth sciences FPS bachelor/biology FPS bachelor). Also soil nematodes can be included in the trial. Nematodes can be identified based on mouthpart morphology, which indicates whether they are plant parasites, fungal feeders, bacterial feeders or carnivorous predators. This will indicate the presence of crop pests. In specific cases we could monitor numbers of a specific crop pathogen (fungus/virus/bacterial crop infection) over the growing season (biology FPS bachelor). We can also place a student that monitors aggregate stability for the different treatments or optimizes measurements for aggregate stability by trying out different methods and comparing results, f.e. compare wet sieving methods with FTIR spectroscopy measurements (earth sciences FPS bachelor), as well as a student that monitors different forms of carbon in the treatments. Total carbon, mineral associated carbon (MAOM), particulate organic carbon (POM) and permanganate oxidizable carbon (POXC) (this last fraction is very sensitive to soil management) (earth sciences FPS bachelor).
The following cropland management will be tested:
Project 1: soil microbes (FPS earth sciences or biology). Daily supervisor/examiner: Elly Morriën, second assessor: Franciska de Vries
Project 2: soil nematodes/crop pests (FPS biology). Daily supervisor: Shixiu Zhang, examiner: Elly Morriën, second assessor: Albert Tietema
Project 3: aggregate stability. Daily supervisor/examiner: Elly Morriën, second assessor: Erik Cammeraat.
Project 4: Soil carbon. Daily supervisor/examiner: Elly Morriën, second assessor: Boris Jansen