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Our Faculty Michiel van Breugel
A headshot of smiling Michiel van Breugel who has short black hair. He is wearing a brown Nike shirt with horizontal stripes in grey and white. He is carrying a backpack and is standing in front of trees in a forest.
Michiel van Breugel
Science (Environmental Studies)
Associate Professor

Associate Professor Michiel van Breugel received his MSc in Forestry and Nature Management in 1997 and his PhD in 2007, both from Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

During his doctoral research, he established a chronosequence of permanent sample plots in secondary forests in southern Mexico, which is now one of the longest-running studies on secondary forest dynamics in the Tropics. As Postdoctoral Fellow at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) in Panama (2007-2013), he co-led the design and established two of the largest long-term field studies of their kind in the Tropics as part of an interdisciplinary project on ecosystem services of tropical forests. Both projects are still running. The first is a secondary forest dynamics (SFD) study in a moist and a dry agricultural landscape with 177 permanent vegetation plots. The second is a 60-hectare reforestation experiment with different combinations of native tree species with contrasting resource acquisition and use strategies. Parallel liana removal and nutrient addition experiments were set up a few years later with international groups of collaborators. This combination of field studies and experiments offer alternative approaches to quantify and scale the influence of environmental conditions, functional composition, interactions and landscape-scale processes on biodiversity and ecosystem processes and services of ‘new forests’ in human-modified landscapes.

Currently, Assoc Prof van Breugel continues to co-lead the secondary forest dynamics study in Panama and related experiments and is a collaborator in the reforestation experiment. Both studies have generated an increasing number of collaborations with colleagues from different disciplines. In Singapore, he leads a collaborative and long-term study, with colleagues from the Environmental Research group at Yale-NUS and other institutions, on the distribution, regeneration and ecosystem functions of mangrove forests. Assoc Prof van Breugel collaborates with the NUS School of Design and Environment and the National Parks Board on research on the ecosystem functions of urban vegetation and trees and is Co-investigator of the new Madagascar-centered project, “Resilient blue-green infrastructures – enabling transformation towards livable and climate-resilient flood-prone landscapes of tropical cities” which is part of the ETH-Singapore Centre’s ‘Future Cities Lab Global’ programme.