Seal element of the university of freiburg in the shape of a clover

Dr. Gesine Pufal

University of Freiburg
Ecology and Biodiversity

Internal Junior Fellow
April 2020 – January 2021

E-Mail: Gesine.pufal@nature.uni-freiburg.de

Last Update: 31.08.2021

Curriculum Vitae

Gesine Pufal studied biology with a focus on botany at the University of Rostock from 1999 to 2005. She then was awarded a New Zealand International Doctoral Research Scholarship and moved to Wellington, New Zealand, where she received her PhD in ecology and biodiversity from Victoria University of Wellington in 2010. From 2011 to 2013, she was a ProScience PostDoc at Leuphana University in Lüneburg in the ecosystem function working group and since 2013 is a researcher and lecturer (equivalent to assistant professor) at the University of Freiburg in the Department of Nature Conservation and Landscape Ecology. Her teaching in Bachelor and Master degree courses covers different aspects of ecology and conservation biology. During her research, Gesine Pufal worked extensively in various arid and alpine ecosystems of the Southern Hemisphere but recently, she moved from more fieldwork-based research into experimental common garden experiments and laboratory model systems. Her current research focuses on anthropogenic effects on seed dispersal, such as consequences of human-mediated dispersal or climate change effects on the interplay between seed predation and dispersal. In her FRIAS project, she hence aims to identify traits that cause the directionality to either seed predation or dispersal in a slug-seed model system under different climate change scenarios.

Selected Publications

FRIAS Project