17 results match your criteria: "Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke) Helsinki Finland.[Affiliation]"

Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) growth can be limited by light and nutrient availability. Infauna are common inhabitants of SAV meadows. Their activity increases nutrient mobility, and they can positively affect plant growth, but we do not know their role in plant trait-biomass production relationships.

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Fishing has the potential to influence the life-history traits of exploited populations. However, our understanding of how fisheries can induce evolutionary genetic changes remains incomplete. The discovery of large-effect loci linked with ecologically important life-history traits, such as age at maturity in Atlantic salmon (), provides an opportunity to study the impacts of temporally varying fishing pressures on these traits.

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For many aquatic and semiaquatic mammal, amphibian and fish species, environmental DNA (eDNA) methods are employed to detect species distribution and to monitor their presence, but eDNA is much less employed for avian species. Here, we developed primers for the detection of true geese and swan species using eDNA and optimised a PCR protocol for eDNA. We selected taiga bean goose () as our focal (sub)species and sampled water from lakes, from which the presence of taiga bean goose was visually confirmed.

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Wetland habitats are changing under multiple anthropogenic pressures. Nutrient leakage and pollution modify physico-chemical state of wetlands and affect the ecosystem through bottom-up processes, while alien predators affect the ecosystems in a top-down manner. Boreal wetlands are important breeding areas for several waterbird species, the abundances of which potentially reflect both bottom-up and top-down ecosystem processes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Functional trait approaches in ecology struggle due to unclear hypotheses about how traits interact with environmental factors, which complicates understanding of ecological mechanisms.
  • Community-weighted mean trait values (CWMs) can skew insights since they mainly represent dominant species, while hierarchical joint species distribution models (JSDMs) provide a broader view of trait-niche relationships.
  • A study of saproxylic beetles in Finland showed that trait-niche relationships varied depending on the metric used, with CWMs indicating more support for these relationships than JSDMs, emphasizing the need for careful metric selection in ecological research.
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In order to develop more economic uses of lignin, greater knowledge regarding its native structure is required. This can inform the development of optimized extraction methods that preserve desired structural properties. Current extraction methods alter the polymeric structure of lignin, leading to a loss of valuable structural groups or the formation of new non-native ones.

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Stable carbon isotopes in plants can help evaluate and improve the representation of carbon and water cycles in land-surface models, increasing confidence in projections of vegetation response to climate change. Here, we evaluated the predictive skills of the Joint UK Land Environmental Simulator (JULES) to capture spatio-temporal variations in carbon isotope discrimination (ΔC) reconstructed by tree rings at 12 sites in the United Kingdom over the period 1979-2016. Modeled and measured ΔC time series were compared at each site and their relationships with local climate investigated.

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In Finland, the distribution area of the taiga tick, (Schulze, 1930), is nested within a broader area of distribution of a congeneric species, the sheep tick, (Linnaeus, 1758) (Acari: Ixodidae). We assess whether distinct environmental adaptations or dispersal history provides a more parsimonious explanation for the differences in the distributions of the two common and medically important ixodids in Finland. We used an innovative spatially constrained randomization procedure to analyze whether crowdsourced occurrence data points of the two tick species had statistically different associations with any of the 28 environmental variables.

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Article Synopsis
  • A genetic analysis of 1469 roe deer samples from Central and Eastern Europe, along with 1541 mtDNA sequences from GenBank, reveals two main lineages: European and Siberian, with the latter more common in Eastern Europe.
  • *The European lineage is further divided into three clades—Central, Eastern, and Western—with distinct spatial distributions, particularly showing a fragmented range for the Western clade from Portugal to Russia.
  • *Most haplogroups in the Central and Eastern clades expanded during the Weichselian glacial period, while the Western clade's expansion coincided with the warmer Eemian interglacial, highlighting the role of refugia in maintaining genetic diversity during the Last Glacial Maximum.
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  • * Research involving citizen scientists revealed that increased impervious surfaces (like concrete) around pedunculate oaks led to a decrease in insect damage, while more forest cover increased herbivory from chewing insects.
  • * Local canopy cover can mitigate the negative effects of impervious surfaces on certain herbivores, indicating that urban habitat characteristics play a crucial role in shaping plant-insect interactions.
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Faba bean ( L.), a member of the Fabaceae family, is one of the important food legumes cultivated in cool temperate regions. It holds great importance for human consumption and livestock feed because of its high protein content, dietary fibre, and nutritional value.

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Anthropogenic stressors, such as pollutants, act as selective factors that can leave measurable changes in allele frequencies in the genome. Metals are of particular concern among pollutants, because of interference with vital biological pathways. We use the three-spined stickleback as a model for adaptation to mercury pollution in natural populations.

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Understanding spatiotemporal population trends and their drivers is a key aim in population ecology. We further need to be able to predict how the dynamics and sizes of populations are affected in the long term by changing landscapes and climate. However, predictions of future population trends are sensitive to a range of modeling assumptions.

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For decades, ecologists have investigated the effects of tree species diversity on tree productivity at different scales and with different approaches ranging from observational to experimental study designs. Using data from five European national forest inventories (16,773 plots), six tree species diversity experiments (584 plots), and six networks of comparative plots (169 plots), we tested whether tree species growth responses to species mixing are consistent and therefore transferrable between those different research approaches. Our results confirm the general positive effect of tree species mixing on species growth (16% on average) but we found no consistency in species-specific responses to mixing between any of the three approaches, even after restricting comparisons to only those plots that shared similar mixtures compositions and forest types.

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We conducted a large-scale population genetic survey of genetic diversity of the host grass s.l., which fitness can be highly dependent on its symbiotic fungus , to evaluate genetic variation and population structure across the European range.

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The conservation and management of endangered species requires information on their genetic diversity, relatedness and population structure. The main genetic markers applied for these questions are microsatellites and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), the latter of which remain the more resource demanding approach in most cases. Here, we compare the performance of two approaches, SNPs obtained by restriction-site-associated DNA sequencing (RADseq) and 16 DNA microsatellite loci, for estimating genetic diversity, relatedness and genetic differentiation of three, small, geographically close wild brown trout () populations and a regionally used hatchery strain.

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Large terrestrial carnivores can sometimes display strong family bonds affecting the spatial distribution of related individuals. We studied the spatial genetic relatedness and family structure of female Eurasian lynx, continuously distributed in southern Finland. We hypothesized that closely related females form matrilineal assemblages, clustering together with relatives living in the neighboring areas.

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