Jennifer Bernard

    Jennifer Bernard

    MSc student (completed in 2016), Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph (Supervisor: Merritt Turetsky)

    Thesis Topic: Changes in understory plant species abundance along tree-tundra ecotones in the Yukon Territory, Canada.


    Shifts in northern vegetation with warming are well documented, particularly at tree-line where species often are at their physiological limits. I investigated ecological and evolutionary controls on understory species composition at tree-line in the Yukon Territories of Canada. I found that plant functional type abundance was more strongly influenced by aspect and elevation classes than by fine-scale soil parameters. South-facing, diffuse slopes, had greater shrub and lower bryophyte abundance than north-facing, abrupt slopes. I explored relationships between species diversity, co-occurrence, and overlap among aspect and elevational classes, and also examined the phylogenetic structuring of shrub species found on my gradients. I found that species occurrences, overlap, and phylogenetic structuring varied more strongly with aspect than elevation. Overall, my research emphasizes that both environmental and evolutionary controls influence plant communities at tree-line, and that differences between north- and south-facing slopes might make them respond uniquely to environmental change.

    Awards and Scholarships


    • Northern Scientific Training Program (NSTP) Award (2013)
    • Middleton Graduate Teaching Assistant Award (2013)
    • CBS Graduate Teaching Assistant Award of Excellence (2014).