dhr. dr. B. (Boris) Jansen

Universitair Docent
  • Faculteit der Natuurwetenschappen, Wiskunde en Informatica
    IBED
  • POSTBUS  94240
    1090 GE  Amsterdam
    Kamernummer: C3.221
  • B.Jansen@uva.nl
    T:  0205257444

I work as tenured Assistant Professor in Soil Chemistry at the Earth Surface Science Research Group of the Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics

In addition, I am currently Director of the Bachelor programme Future Planet Studies

Research interests

Of the various soil scientific disciplines, soil chemistry holds my particular interest. I am fascinated by biogeochemistry in general and in particular by understanding the fate of natural and anthropogenic compounds in terrestrial ecosystems. How does the chemistry of soils and sediments regulate the transport, transformation and preservation/degradation of compounds? How is this chemistry, and thereby the fate of compounds, altered by natural or human-induced change? What are the implications for the functioning of ecosystems, and how can we use this knowledge to optimize the ecosystem services rendered by the soil? 

More information 

For my personal background and CV, more information about my research interest, or a list of my publications, please click on the appropriate tab above.

Or follow the links below to access my linked-in profile or Thomson ResearchID profile. 

Curriculum Vitae

You can download my complete Curriculum Vitae in pdf format via the link below.

Research background 

Assistant Professor at the University of Amsterdam (2008-now)

As Assistant Professor I am  responsible for research and teaching (Bachelor, Master and PhD levels) in Soil Chemistry.

I provided a detailed description of my current research interest on a separate page. Please click here or select the tab 'Research interests' above.

Postdoc at the University of Amsterdam (2003-2008)

Research topic: upper forest line transitions in the Ecuadorian Andes

During my Postdoc project, I worked in the multi-disciplinary RUFLE research project of the Earth Surface Processes and Materials research group and the Paleo-Ecology and Landscape Ecology research group of IBED, together with two PhD students.

The overall aim was to study past upper forest line fluctuations in Ecuador and use the information to reconstruct the natural position of the upper forest line in the absence of human impact in the form of clear-cutting and burning.   To this end, I developed a new technique to reconstruct past vegetation compositions. I showed that a combination of chain-lengts of n -alkanes and n -alcohols from the epicuticular waxes on the leaves and roots of plants can be used to distinguish plant species from one another, and developed a first database of such patterns in Ecuadorian vegetation. I was also able to prove that the straight-chain lipid patterns are preserved unaltered in peat deposits and in the volcanic ash soils of the Ecuadorian Andes for thousands of years. In close cooperation with the Computational Geo-Ecology group of IBED, I subsequently developed the advanced, new 'Vegetation Reconstruction with the Help of Inverse modeling and Biomarkers'(VERHIB) model to unravel such mixed straight-chain lipid records into the most likely combination of plant species from which they originated. Within the project we combined the results of this so-called biomarker analysis, with fossil pollen analysis. This combination of proxies greatly enhanced our abilities to reconstruct past vegetation dynamics and allowed us to reconstruct past forest compositions and past upper forestline dynamics in the Ecuadorian Andes with previously unattainable accuracy.

Camping in the páramo during the second field campaign of the RUFLE program in Guandera, Ecuador in May 2006.

Ph.D. in Soil Science from the University of Amsterdam (1999-2003)

Research topic: the mobility of aluminium, iron and organic matter in acidic sandy soils.

During my Ph.D. studies, first I succesfully tested the applicability of the new experimental technique of diffusive gradients in thin films (DGT). Specifically, I investigated its ability to distinguish 'free' dissolved Al and Fe from their dissolved organic complexes. Subsequently, I used a combination of DGT and mathematical modeling (Model V and Model VI) to investigate the influence of changes in pH and metal/organic carbon ratios on the degree and type of complexation of Al and Fe with dissolved organic matter in acidic sandy soil solutions. Finally, I used a combination of the before mentioned techniques to study the role of the interactions of Al, Fe and organic matter on the formation of podzols.

Altogether, my research led to a firm establishment of the DGT technique and further vindication of Model Vand Model VI for the analysis of Al and Fe speciation in acidic soil solutions. Furthermore, my studies gave new insights into the mechanisms that regulate the mobility of Al, Fe and DOM in acidic sandy soils in general and the process of podzolization in particular.

In the cooling room with my Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM) solutions during my Ph.D. work in October 2000.

BSc. and MSc. in Environmental Chemistry from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (1993-1998)

Environmental Chemistry is a study of analytical chemisty that focusses on environmental issues such as soil- and water pollution. Within the framework of my Masters studies I investigated:

  • The selective extraction of pesticides from polluted soils using subcritical water.
  • The impact of endocrine disruptive pesticides on drinking-water production in the Netherlands.
  • The distribution of arsenic in the deeper soil of the Dutch province of Noord-Holland.

Current research interests

In general, my current research interest lies in the study of the carbon cycle in soils from a molecular point of view, and in particular the influence of land management and environmental change on (soil) ecosystems.

The global carbon cycle

Within the plethora of soil functions, the role of soils in the global carbon cycle continues to fascinate me. Not only because of the obvious link with climate change, but also because of the relation with fertility and therefore food supply. To unravel the carbon cycle in soils we need detailed soil chemical investigations of carbon dynamics under climate and land use change, and increased occurrence of extreme meteorological events. I see great promise for a combination of molecular characterization techniques and (compound specific) C, H, N and O isotope analysis. However, such investigations need to be carried out in close collaboration with in-depth analysis and modeling of the role and response of belowground biodiversity, as well as physical processes such as erosion. Not only to get a complete picture of the processes driving the carbon cycle, but also to be able transcend from the molecular level to higher scale levels. I feel that there is much progress to be made by intensifying such connections. 

Biomarkers

Closely linked to investigating the carbon cycle is the use of the molecular and/or isotopic signature of soil organic matter as proxy, or biomarker, in environmental reconstructions. Such studies are essential to unravel the response of ecosystems to environmental change, be it anthropogenic or natural. On the other hand, studies of transformations of soil organic matter are needed to assess the stability and applicability of molecular / isotopic proxies in soils. My research within the RUFLE project showed the potential of advancement in this area by the development and use of new analytical techniques, both molecular chemical (biomarker analysis) and computational (the VERHIB model). There is great potential to further develop and apply such proxies, and great interest for such proxies from the paleo-ecological and geo-archaeological communities. An exciting expansion would be the combination with the emerging application of biological proxies such as the use of ancient DNA. Again process based understanding of molecular transformations is needed to assess the applicability. 

Video

Click the link below for a short video of exploratory fieldwork in St. Eustatius in December 2012 in search of suitable records for biomarkers together with colleagues from the Paleo-ecology research group and Geo-archaeologists from SECAR. 

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010

2008

2007

2006

  • B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop, J.A. Hageman, A.M. Cleef & J.M. Verstraten (2006). The straight-chain lipid biomarker composition of plant species responsible for the dominant biomass production along two altitudinal transects in the Ecuadorian Andes. Organic Geochemistry, 37 (10), 1514-1526.
  • B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop, M.C. Kotte, P. de Voogt & J.M. Verstraten (2006). The applicability of Accelerated Solvent Extraction (ASE) to extract lipid biomarkers from soils. Applied Geochemistry, 21 (6), 1006-1015.
  • F.H. Tonneijck, J. van der Plicht, B. Jansen, J.M. Verstraten & H. Hooghiemstra (2006). Radiocarbon dating of soil organic matter fractions in Andosols in Northern Ecuador. Radiocarbon, 48 (3), 337-353.
  • P. Kraal, B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop & J.M. Verstraten (2006). Copper complexation by tannic acid in aqueous solution. Chemosphere, 65 (11), 2193-2198.
  • K.G.J. Nierop, B. Jansen, J.A. Hageman & J.M. Verstraten (2006). The complementarity of extractable and ester-bound lipids in a soil profile under pine. Plant and Soil, 286 (1-2), 269-285.

2005

  • B. Jansen, J. Mulder & J.M. Verstraten (2005). Modeling aluminium solubility in intrazonal podzols using WHAM-S/Model V. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science, 168, 325-333.
  • B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop & J.M. Verstraten (2005). Mechanisms controlling the mobility of dissolved organic matter, aluminium and iron in podzol B horizons. European Journal of Soil Science, 56, 537-550.

2004

  • B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop, J.A. Vrugt & J.M. Verstraten (2004). (Un)certainty of overall binding constants of Al with dissolved organic matter determined by the Scatchard approach. Water Research, 38, 1270-1280.
  • B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop & J.M. Verstraten (2004). Mobilization of dissolved organic matter, aluminium and iron in podzol eluvial horizons as affected by formation of metal-organic complexes and interactions with solid soil material. European Journal of Soil Science, 55, 287-297.

2003

  • B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop & J.M. Verstraten (2003). Mobility of Fe(II), Fe(III) and Al in acidic forest soils mediated by dissolved organic matter: influence of solution pH and metal/organic carbon ratios. Geoderma, 113, 323-340.
  • B. Jansen, A. Mulder & J.M. Verstraten (2003). Organic complexion of Al and Fe in acidic soil solutions comparison of diffusive gradients in thin films analyses with Models V and VI. Analytica Chimica Acta, 498, 105-117.

2002

  • K.G.J. Nierop, B. Jansen & J.M. Verstraten (2002). Dissolved organic matter, aluminium and iron interactions: precipitation induced by metal/carbon ratio, pH and competition. Science of the Total Environment, 300 (1-3), 199-209.
  • A. Kubátová, B. Jansen, J.F. Vaudoisot & S.B. Hawthorne (2002). Thermodynamic and kinetic models for the extraction of essential oil from savory and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from soil with hot (subcritical) water and supercritical CO2. Journal of Chromatography A, 975, 175-188.
  • B. Jansen, K.G.J. Nierop & J.M. Verstraten (2002). Influence of pH and metal/carbon ratios on soluble organic complexation of Fe(II), Fe(III) and Al(III) in soil solutions determined by diffusive gradients in thin films. Analytica Chimica Acta, 454, 259-270.
  • K.G.J. Nierop, B. Jansen, J.A. Vrugt & J.M. Verstraten (2002). Copper complexation by dissolved organic matter and uncertainty assessment of their stability constants. Chemosphere, 49 (10), 1191-1200.

2001

  • B. Jansen, M.C. Kotte, A.J. van Wijk & J.M. Verstraten (2001). Comparison of diffusive gradients in thin films and equilibrium dialysis for the determination of Al, Fe(III) and Zn complexed with dissolved organic matter. Science of the Total Environment, 277 (1-3), 45-55.

2009

2006

  • B. Jansen, H. Hooghiemstra, J.M. Verstraten, M. Moscol, F.H. Tonneijck & A.M. Cleef (2006). Reforestation in the frame of the Kyoto Protocol: up to which elevation? WOTRO News, 2006 (7 (JUL06)), 16-16.

2003

  • B. Jansen (2003). Review of : Cation binding by humic substances [Review of the book Cation binding by humic substances]. Geoderma, 114, 141-142.

2003

Wetenschappelijke positie

  • B. Jansen (period: 2013 till 2013). Board member Position at : Stichting de Nationale DenkTank.
  • B. Jansen (period: 2013 till 2013). Secretary of Internal Affairs Position at : Soil System Sciences Division of the European Geosciences Union.
  • B. Jansen (period: 2011 till 2012). Member of the Scientific Committee of the 4th International Congress Eurosoil 2012 Position at : European Confederation of Soil Science Societies.
  • B. Jansen (period: 2010 till 2012). Outreach Secretary of the Soil Systems Science Division Position at: European Geosciences Union (EGU).
  • B. Jansen (period: 2007 till 2010). Voorzitter Position at : Nederlandse Bodemkundige Vereniging (NBV).
  • B. Jansen (period: 2007 till 2010). Lid Ambassadeursnetwerk Platform Beta & Techniek Position at : Platform Beta & Techniek.
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