Das Projekt "Regeneration in an Ethiopian montane forest with special emphasis on tree biology and nurse-tree functions" wird vom Umweltbundesamt gefördert und von Universität Bayreuth, Fachgruppe Biologie, Bayreuther Zentrum für Ökologie und Umweltforschung (BayCEER), Lehrstuhl für Pflanzenphysiologie durchgeführt. In the Munessa-Sheshamene region (Ethiopia) several plots of moderately disturbed natural forest and of exotic tree plantations have been investigated with respect to water relations and photosynthetic capcity of selected indigenous and exotic trees. This ongoing work is part of an ecosystem study conducted by soil scientists, geobotanists and plant ecophysiologists that aims at a scientific basis for a sustainable management of the Munessa forest as a model for other semideciduous forests of Ethiopia. The work shall be continued in two working packages, one of which will investigate the so-called nurse-tree effect. Juveniles of indigenous trees developing from seeds that accidentally arrived in a plantation of Eucalyptus saligna, E. globulus or Pinus patula grow significantly faster under the shelter of these 'nurse-trees' than in a natural forest. This unexpected nurse-tree effect will be studied in plantations with a successful regeneration of indigenous trees. In the second working package, regeneration ecology of important indigenous tree species will be studied, comprising modes of regeneration, regenerative capacity and the effective regeneration success under natural and plantation situations.