HEINESCH Bernard
Professeur
Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech
Département GxABT
Biosystems Dynamics and Exchanges (BIODYNE)
Biosystems Dynamics and Exchanges (BIODYNE)
- ULiège address
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Bât. ABT07 G80 - Biosystems Dynamics and Exchanges
Avenue de la Faculté d'Agronomie 8
5030 Gembloux
Belgique
- ULiège phone number
- +32 81 622492
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- Conseil sectoriel à la recherche et à la valorisation
- Sciences et Techniques
- University degrees
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1991: Licencié en Sciences Physiques (Université de Liège)
1991: Agrégé de l'enseignement secondaire supérieur (Université de Liège)
2007: Docteur en Environnement (Faculté des Sciences Agronomiques de Gembloux)
Biography
Bernard Heinesch holds a degree in Physical Sciences from the University of Liège. After a few years as a teaching assistant at Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech and experience in the private sector, he began a PhD thesis in the team of Pr Marc Aubinet, who was heading the Biosystems Physics Unit, on methodological aspects of eddy-covariance, a micro-meteorological technique that is the central element of flux tower sites, infrastructures that allow the study of gas exchanges between ecosystems and the atmosphere. He obtained his PhD in Environment in 2007 and is now part-time Professor at GxABT, in the Biosystems Dynamics and Exchanges unit (BIODYNE).
His main research topic is the cycle of elements exchanged by terrestrial ecosystems (mainly temperate) and having an impact on the atmosphere, in terms of climate or pollution. Environmental controls on the fluxes of the compound of interest are evaluated, this knowledge contributing to the improvement of modelling approaches. The ultimate goal is to improve fundamental knowledge of element cycles to help understand the role of ecosystems on climate and/or the impact of climate change on ecosystems. It focuses on greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, methane) and more reactive gases such as volatile organic compounds and ozone. More specifically, he has acquired expertise on the use of micrometeorological methods for the measurement and interpretation of exchanges at the ecosystem scale and on the use of chambers to work at a smaller scale (leaf/soil). This research is strongly connected to networks at the European or global level (ICOS), allowing international collaborations.
Research field
- Enseignement des sciences exactes et naturelles
- Physique du globe
Duties or mandates
- Agrégé et Professeur part-time