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Rúna Magnússon, PhD

Wageningen University (The Netherlands)

Rúna, with a rifle slung over her shoulder, walks up a glacier in Svalbard, with Longyearbyen in the background. (Photo: Alexandra Hamm)

Rúna, with a rifle slung over her shoulder, walks up a glacier in Svalbard, with Longyearbyen in the background. (Photo: Alexandra Hamm)

What’s the work that you do?

I work as a lecturer and researcher at a plant ecology institute and I study relations between climate change (rainfall extremes in particular), tundra vegetation growth and permafrost degradation in Siberia and Svalbard. I use field experiments, remote sensing and dendrochronology.

What keeps you going?

The beauty and stillness of polar ecosystems is tremendously inspiring and important to me. I want to contribute to conserving it by studying the impact of future climate changes and extremes in the field and sharing my research and stories with students and a general audience.

What’s your message to the world?

Just like with people, the toughest ecosystems can also be the most sensitive ones.

Organisation: Wageningen University (The Netherlands)

Nationality: Netherlands Netherlands

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We are grateful to The Ocean Foundation for acting as our fiscal sponsor in the US, the Curtis and Edith Munson Foundation for sponsoring this project, and the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) for supporting us.