Jens-Christian Svenning
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Jens-Christian Svenning is a Danish
ecologist Ecology () is the natural science of the relationships among living organisms and their environment. Ecology considers organisms at the individual, population, community, ecosystem, and biosphere levels. Ecology overlaps with the closely re ...
,
biogeographer Biogeography is the study of the distribution of species and ecosystems in geographic space and through geological time. Organisms and biological communities often vary in a regular fashion along geographic gradients of latitude, elevation, ...
and academic. He is a professor at the Department of
Biology Biology is the scientific study of life and living organisms. It is a broad natural science that encompasses a wide range of fields and unifying principles that explain the structure, function, growth, History of life, origin, evolution, and ...
at
Aarhus University Aarhus University (, abbreviated AU) is a public research university. Its main campus is located in Aarhus, Denmark. It is the second largest and second oldest university in Denmark. The university is part of the Coimbra Group, the Guild, and Ut ...
,
Denmark Denmark is a Nordic countries, Nordic country in Northern Europe. It is the metropole and most populous constituent of the Kingdom of Denmark,, . also known as the Danish Realm, a constitutionally unitary state that includes the Autonomous a ...
where he also serves as the director of DNRF Center for Ecological Dynamics in a Novel Biosphere (ECONOVO), established in 2023. Svenning is known for his research in
macroecology Macroecology is a subfield in ecology that uses a methodological approach that investigates the empirical patterns and mechanistic processes by which the particulate components of complex ecological systems generate emergent structures and dynamics ...
,
biogeography Biogeography is the study of the species distribution, distribution of species and ecosystems in geography, geographic space and through evolutionary history of life, geological time. Organisms and biological community (ecology), communities o ...
,
biodiversity Biodiversity is the variability of life, life on Earth. It can be measured on various levels. There is for example genetic variability, species diversity, ecosystem diversity and Phylogenetics, phylogenetic diversity. Diversity is not distribut ...
, the
effects of climate change on biomes Climate change is already now altering biomes, adversely affecting terrestrial and marine ecosystems. Climate change represents long-term changes in temperature and average weather patterns. This leads to a substantial increase in both the frequen ...
,
rewilding Rewilding is a form of ecological restoration aimed at increasing biodiversity and restoring natural processes. It differs from other forms of ecological restoration in that rewilding aspires to reduce human influence on ecosystems. It is also d ...
, and human-environment interactions across historical and future contexts with a specific focus on concepts like disequilibrium dynamics and the impacts of top-down trophic processes. In 1995, he collected a specimen of a new species of pepper plant which was named after him as ''Piper svenningii''. He is the recipient of the 2011
Global Biodiversity Information Facility The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is an international organisation that focuses on making scientific data on biodiversity available via the Internet using web services. The data are provided by many institutions from around th ...
Ebbe Nielsen Prize The Ebbe Nielsen Prize was an international science award made annually between 2002 and 2014 by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), to recognize a researcher who had made substantial contributions to the field of biodiversity info ...
, the
EliteForsk Prize The EliteForsk Prize (Elite Research Prize) is the most prestigious award given by the Danish Council for Independent Research, of the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Higher Education (Denmark), Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science. ...
from the Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science in 2014, the 2016
Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters The Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters ({{Langx, da, Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab or ''Videnskabernes Selskab'') is a Danish academy of science. The Royal Danish Academy was established on 13 November 1742, and was create ...
' Queen Margrethe II's Science Award,
Chinese Academy of Sciences The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS; ) is the national academy for natural sciences and the highest consultancy for science and technology of the People's Republic of China. It is the world's largest research organization, with 106 research i ...
' Distinguished Fellow Award in 2017, the 2021 Villum Kann Rasmussen Annual Award in Science and Technology of DKK 5 million, the European Ecological Federation
Ernst Haeckel Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (; ; 16 February 1834 – 9 August 1919) was a German zoologist, natural history, naturalist, eugenics, eugenicist, Philosophy, philosopher, physician, professor, marine biology, marine biologist and artist ...
Prize in 2022, and the 2023
Carlsberg Foundation Carlsberg Foundation () is a not-for-profit organization that was founded by J. C. Jacobsen in 1876, by allocating some of his shares in the Carlsberg Brewery to fund and operate the Carlsberg Laboratory and the Museum of National History at ...
Research Prize. Svenning was elected as Fellow of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters in 2010 and the Danish Academy of Natural Sciences in 2011.


Education and early career

Svenning obtained a MSc in biology in 1997 from Aarhus University. Subsequently, he received a PhD in ecology from Aarhus University in 1999.


Career

Svenning began his academic career in 1999 as an assistant professor at the Department of Biological Sciences at Aarhus University, followed by a postdoctoral position at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institution during 2000-2002. In 2002, he became assistant professor at Aarhus University, later appointed associate professor in 2005, professor (MSO) in 2009, and has been serving as professor at Aarhus University since 2013. Svenning served as the director of Center for Biodiversity Dynamics in a Changing World (BIOCHANGE) from 2017 to 2023. In 2023, he was appointed as the director of DNRF Center for Ecological Dynamics in a Novel Biosphere (ECONOVO). Svenning worked as subject editor of ''
Ecography ''Ecography'' is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Wiley on behalf of the Nordic Society Oikos covering the field of spatial ecology. It has been published since 1978, the first 14 volumes under the name ''Holarctic Ecology' ...
'' from 2005 to 2010 and deputy editor-in-chief at the same journal since 2010, and was also associate editor of the ''
Journal of Biogeography The ''Journal of Biogeography'' is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal that was established in 1974. It covers aspects of spatial, ecological, and historical biogeography. The founding editor-in-chief was David Watts, followed by John Flen ...
'' from 2007 to 2019. He has served as chair of the
Maasai Mara Maasai Mara, sometimes also spelt Masai Mara and locally known simply as The Mara, is a large national game reserve in Narok County, Kenya, contiguous with the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania. It is named in honour of the Maasai people, th ...
Science and Development Initiative Scientific Board during 2015 – 2018 and since then as chair of the board. He has been serving as the subject editor for the ''
Nordic Journal of Botany The ''Nordic Journal of Botany'' is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal of botany, including the plant ecology, taxonomy, evolution, conservation, and biogeography of plants, algae, bryophytes, and fungi. It originated from four botanical j ...
'' since 2007. He has also been on the 15. Juni Fonden Board since 2018, and Rewilding Europe Supervisory Board since 2020. In addition, he was appointed to the Danish Biodiversity Council to provide expert advice to the Danish government and parliament in the Ministry of Environment of Denmark from 2020 to 2024.


Research

Svenning has contributed to the field of ecology by studying
macroecology Macroecology is a subfield in ecology that uses a methodological approach that investigates the empirical patterns and mechanistic processes by which the particulate components of complex ecological systems generate emergent structures and dynamics ...
,
biogeography Biogeography is the study of the species distribution, distribution of species and ecosystems in geography, geographic space and through evolutionary history of life, geological time. Organisms and biological community (ecology), communities o ...
,
landscape ecology Landscape ecology is the science of studying and improving relationships between ecological processes in the environment and particular ecosystems. This is done within a variety of landscape scales, development spatial patterns, and organizatio ...
,
community ecology In ecology, a community is a group or association of populations of two or more different species occupying the same geographical area at the same time, also known as a biocoenosis, biotic community, biological community, ecological communit ...
,
paleoecology Paleoecology (also spelled palaeoecology) is the study of interactions between organisms and/or interactions between organisms and their environments across geologic timescales. As a discipline, paleoecology interacts with, depends on and informs ...
, conservation and
rewilding Rewilding is a form of ecological restoration aimed at increasing biodiversity and restoring natural processes. It differs from other forms of ecological restoration in that rewilding aspires to reduce human influence on ecosystems. It is also d ...
,
human ecology Human ecology is an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary study of the relationship between humans and their natural, social, and built environments. The philosophy and study of human ecology has a diffuse history with advancements in ecolo ...
,
ecoinformatics Ecoinformatics, or ecological informatics, is the science of information in ecology and environmental science. It integrates environmental and information sciences to define entities and natural processes with language common to both humans and ...
,
remote sensing Remote sensing is the acquisition of information about an physical object, object or phenomenon without making physical contact with the object, in contrast to in situ or on-site observation. The term is applied especially to acquiring inform ...
, and
global change Global change in broad sense refers to planetary-scale changes in the Earth system. It is most commonly used to encompass the variety of changes connected to the rapid increase in human activities which started around mid-20th century, i.e., the G ...
biology including
climate change Present-day climate change includes both global warming—the ongoing increase in Global surface temperature, global average temperature—and its wider effects on Earth's climate system. Climate variability and change, Climate change in ...
and alien species invasions. He has utilized and developed
Big Data Big data primarily refers to data sets that are too large or complex to be dealt with by traditional data processing, data-processing application software, software. Data with many entries (rows) offer greater statistical power, while data with ...
approaches based on large databases to handle and analyze advanced data in his research alongside field-based research.


Basic biodiversity science and ecology

Svenning has studied basic biodiversity science and ecology throughout his career. As part of an international collaboration, he showed that processes influencing the latitudinal gradient in species richness are complex, with trait diversity in tree assemblages showing patterns consistent with environmental filtering theory at the alpha and beta scales, but no consistent support for any single theory at the gamma scale. He also determined that microhabitat specialization, particularly related to topography, is a key factor in maintaining the diversity of palm species in Yasuní National Park.


Past climate change impacts on biodiversity and ecosystems

Svenning's work in biogeography has involved using a variety of methods to understand how different factors have influenced the distribution of species and ecosystems over time. Along with his collaborators, he found that plant range sizes are codetermined by habitat area and long and short-term climate stability. He also participated in a study suggesting that past climate changes are linked to reduced spatial turnover and increased nestedness in angiosperm tree diversity worldwide, potentially foreshadowing homogenization and decreased diversity under future human-driven climate change.


Impacts of current and future climate change

Svenning has examined the impacts of current and future climate change on biodiversity, ecosystems and people in many studies. In a study, he and his team revealed that global warming is leading to significant shifts in the distribution of tropical plant species, with evidence of upward movements of vegetation zones and individual plant taxa up to 500 meters higher in elevation compared to records from 210 years ago. He also contributed to a related European study showing that the rate of increase in plant species richness on mountain summits in Europe has accelerated in recent decades, linked to climate warming. With colleagues, he also determined that past defaunation has severely reduced plant migration rates, which could limit the ability of plant species to adapt to climate change. Through his work, Svenning emphasized that vegetation will likely experience disequilibrium with climate change, with marked changes at both leading and trailing edges. In a study with Skov, he established that European tree species fill their climatically determined potential ranges by only 38%, suggesting limited tracking of near-future climate changes. Later, together with Seliger, McGill and Gill, he determined that North American trees and shrubs are mostly not fully utilizing their potential climatic niches, with climate explaining only about half of the species' ranges, and small-ranged species showing high levels of climatic disequilibrium likely due to dispersal lags as well as undetected environmental factors or biotic interactions. Additionally, he has contributed to work showing that warming-induced tree and shrub expansion within the Arctic will be limited by dispersal, soil development, and other disequilibrium dynamics, but plantings and unintentional seed dispersal by humans could have large impacts on spread rates. Moreover, as part of a large team, he demonstrated that high-mountain plant species in the European Alps are projected to experience substantial range reductions of around 44-50% by the end of the twenty-first century, with population dynamics lagging behind climatic trends and creating an extinction debt, especially impacting species endemic to the Alps.


Megafauna history and ecology

Svenning also looked into human-megafauna interactions, megafauna extinctions in recent prehistory, and the ecological role of megafauna in shaping past and present ecosystems. In further collaborative research, he determined that cultural filtering has been the dominant driver of megafauna range contractions in China over the past 2 millennia. With Faurby, he found that human activities have significantly altered Earth's mammal diversity patterns, leading to strong deviations in current patterns compared to their natural state for large-bodied species, emphasizing the need to consider natural distributions for a better understanding of diversity drivers and conservation benchmarks. More recently, in 2023, Svenning conducted a joint study with Lemoine and Buitenwerf and found that human impact had been the primary driver of late-Quaternary megafauna extinctions, outperforming climatic models. In another collaborative study, he challenged the perception of recent human impact on terrestrial nature, revealing through that nearly three quarters of the Earth's land was inhabited and shaped by human societies over 12,000 years ago. Linked to this work, he and colleagues established that the current rate of extinctions among mammals – across body sizes – suggested that the incipient sixth mass extinction will lead to the loss of a significant amount of phylogenetic diversity, which will take millions of years to recover even if extinction rates revert to pre-human levels. Furthermore, with colleagues, Svenning identified the presence of abundant and diverse large herbivores in Great Britain during the Last Interglacial period alongside high structural diversity in vegetation. In an earlier review in 2002, he estimated that closed forests would have predominated in north-western Europe under existing natural conditions, but open vegetation would also be frequent in varied settings and maintained by large herbivores and fire. In 2023, in work led by Pearce, he and colleagues showed based on extensive pollen records that substantial light woodland and open vegetation characterized the temperate forest biome in Europe during the Last Interglacial, suggesting the rich megafauna as a likely key driver of this structure.


Rewilding and conservation

Svenning has studied rewilding and conservation. He has proposed that trophic rewilding via restoring top-down trophic interactions and associated trophic cascades is a promising strategy to promote self-regulating biodiverse ecosystems, and that it could be a powerful tool for mitigating the impacts of human-induced global change on biodiversity and ecosystems. With colleagues, he further provided a definition and guiding principles that clarify the concept for understanding of rewilding as a continuum of scale and human influence, emphasizing ecosystem restoration to achieve autonomous nature, and emphasizing rewilding as a central approach to ecosystem restoration to promote
ecological resilience In ecology, resilience is the capacity of an ecosystem to respond to a perturbation or Disturbance (ecology), disturbance by resisting damage and subsequently recovering. Such perturbations and disturbances can include stochastic events such as ...
.


Globalization and alien species invasions

Svenning has explored globalization, alien species invasions and related issues such as biotic homogenization. In a study published in ''Nature'', he and Fricke demonstrated that human-induced species introductions are leading to the homogenization of global ecological networks, diminishing beta diversity among local networks and modularity within networks, with potential consequences for ecosystem resilience and coevolutionary dynamics. In a joint study, Svenning revealed that human activities in China have caused narrow-ranged plant species to fill their climatic potential ranges to a lesser extent than widespread species, leading to a risk of biotic homogenization also among native species. In a collaborative study, Svenning highlighted the potential of megaherbivores in managing plant invasions and promoting native plant diversity, particularly in protected areas with high megaherbivore densities and mid-productive ecosystems, supporting the concept of trophic rewilding.


Human ecology

Svenning's research in human ecology focuses on the history of environmental transformation and the relationship between human beings and the natural environment. In a joint study, he determined that childhood exposure to green spaces is linked to a reduced risk of a broad variety of psychiatric disorders later in life, underscoring the importance of incorporating natural environments into urban planning and childhood experiences for improved mental health. As part of a team, he also found that climate change is shifting the human climate niche at an unprecedented rate, with potentially devastating consequences for the poorest regions of the world, and that it could push one-third of humanity outside the human climate niche by end-of-century under current policies, but reducing warming to 1.5°C would limit exposure to unprecedented heat to 5%.


Ecoinformatics and remote sensing

Svenning has integrated use of remote sensing and ecoinformatics into his research to better understand ecological patterns and processes. In a collaborative research, with colleagues he showed that using a multilevel approach with satellite data can significantly enhance the prediction of household wealth in rural areas, aiding the monitoring of poverty-related Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Together with colleagues, he has contributed to the development of several larger databases on biodiversity data such as PHYLACINE, which contained phylogenies, range maps, trait data, and threat status for all known mammal species, taking into account human impacts. Additionally, jointly with his team he also developed the TREECHANGE database, as well as the Botanical Information Ecology Network (BIEN) where ecologists, botanists and computer scientists assemble worldwide data on plant geographic distribution, diversity, and functionality.


Awards and honors

*2011 – Ebbe Nielsen Prize, Global Biodiversity Information Facility *2014 – EliteForsk Prize, Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science *2016 – Queen Margrethe II’s Science Award, Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters *2017 – Distinguished Fellow, Chinese Academy of Sciences *2021 – Annual Award in Science and Technology, Villum Foundation *2022 – Ernst Haeckel Prize, European Ecological Federation *2023 – Carlsberg Foundation Research Prize


Selected articles

*Svenning, J. C., & Skov, F. (2004). Limited filling of the potential range in European tree species. Ecology Letters, 7(7), 565-573. *Sandel, B., Arge, L., Dalsgaard, B., Davies, R. G., Gaston, K. J., Sutherland, W. J., & Svenning, J. C. (2011). The influence of Late Quaternary climate-change velocity on species endemism. Science, 334(6056), 660-664. *Svenning, J. C., & Sandel, B. (2013). Disequilibrium vegetation dynamics under future climate change. American Journal of Botany, 100(7), 1266-1286. *Lenoir, J., & Svenning, J. C. (2015). Climate‐related range shifts–a global multidimensional synthesis and new research directions. Ecography, 38(1), 15-28. *Svenning, J. C., Eiserhardt, W. L., Normand, S., Ordonez, A., & Sandel, B. (2015). The influence of paleoclimate on present-day patterns in biodiversity and ecosystems. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 46, 551-572. *Svenning, J. C., Pedersen, P. B., Donlan, C. J., Ejrnæs, R., Faurby, S., Galetti, M., ... & Vera, F. W. (2016). Science for a wilder Anthropocene: Synthesis and future directions for trophic rewilding research. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 113(4), 898-906. *Engemann, K., Pedersen, C. B., Arge, L., Tsirogiannis, C., Mortensen, P. B., & Svenning, J. C. (2019). Residential green space in childhood is associated with lower risk of psychiatric disorders from adolescence into adulthood. Proceedings of the national academy of sciences, 116(11), 5188-5193. *Fricke, E. C., Ordonez, A., Rogers, H. S., & Svenning, J. C. (2022). The effects of defaunation on plants’ capacity to track climate change. Science, 375(6577), 210-214. *Mungi, N. A., Jhala, Y. V., Qureshi, Q., le Roux, E., & Svenning, J. C. (2023). Megaherbivores provide biotic resistance against alien plant dominance. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 1-9. *Li, W., Guo, W. Y., Pasgaard, M., Niu, Z., Wang, L., Chen, F., ... & Svenning, J. C. (2023). Human fingerprint on structural density of forests globally. Nature Sustainability, 1-12. *Lenton, T. M., Xu, C., Abrams, J. F., Ghadiali, A., Loriani, S., Sakschewski, B., ... & Scheffer, M. (2023). Quantifying the human cost of global warming. Nature Sustainability, 1-11.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Svenning, Jens-Christian Ecologists Danish ecologists Biogeographers Academic staff of Aarhus University Aarhus University alumni Indiana University alumni Members of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters 1970 births Living people