Scientific Comics
Scientific Comic for a Virtual Issue of Physiologia Plantarum on the topic of solute transporters in plants.
Articles & Comic can be seen here: https://bit.ly/34bLcUc
An easy sketch about different types of plant cell organelles and their functions.
Comic about the stability and shape-giving function of the plant cell wall. Without Cell Walls, its difficult to identify many cell types of different plant tissues.
A comic I made for a Virtual Issue on H2S and NO signal integration for Physiologia Plantarum, representing the plants that the research has been done on and the involvement of H2S and NO in stress situations.
Illustration and compilation of articles found here: https://bit.ly/2YL3Scm
Scientific Comic I made for Physiologia Plantarum.
Plants generated through traditional mutagenesis are not considered GMO, genetic engineering by gene transfer from one plant to another, makes the recipient plant a GMO and currently it is under debate if CRISPR engineered plants are GMOs or not.
A variation of this Illustration found on the Cover here: https://bit.ly/35f3C7T
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/13993054/homepage/droughtstress.html
Cover for a Virtual Issue on rice research in Physiologia Plantarum
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/13993054/homepage/rice.html
Comic I made for the Virtual Issue on salt stressed plants for Physiologia Plantarum.
Comic and article compilation can be found here: https://bit.ly/38wTXeG
Cover Comic for a Special Issue on Cell Walls for Physiologia Plantarum.
Together with the article compilation visible here: https://bit.ly/2LOnFSI
Comic for a Virtual Issue on Plant Hydraulics in Physiologia Plantarum
Scientific articles can be found here: https://bit.ly/34IvpOB
Introductory Comic-like figure for my PhD thesis on senescence in plants.
The pdf of my PhD thesis can be found here: https://bit.ly/34hCjbO
A comic about randomly occurring challenges my brain puts me into before I start an illustration project that I have never done in a certain way.
It usually turns out quite fine anyways :)
If you want to see what illustration it was about, have a look here: https://bit.ly/36pMBIf