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Sökning: WFRF:(Hambäck Peter Professor)

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1.
  • Åhlén, Imenne, 1991- (författare)
  • Ecosystem services of wetlands and wetlandscapes under hydro-climatic change : Impacts of water flow and inundation patterns
  • 2023
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Wetlands provide ecosystem services valuable for human society and are therefore often considered as nature based solution to different environmental problems. However, with centuries of wetland degradation due to anthropogenic pressures, such as agricultural expansion and forest industry, as well as pressures from climate change, there are large challenges for sustainable wetland management. Thus, for wetland protection and restoration practices to be successful, a deepened understanding on the actual mechanisms controlling wetland functions is required. Understanding how wetlands are connected, with and influenced, by their surrounding environment is also needed. Although most pressures experienced by wetlands operate on scales beyond the individual wetland scale, relatively few studies have thus far addressed large-scale functions and ecosystem service provision from hydrologically interconnected wetlands at the scale of wetlandscapes (i.e., the wetlands’ aggregated hydrological catchments in the landscape). The aim of this thesis is to investigate ecosystem service delivery from wetlands and wetlandscapes under hydro-climatic changes, considering 25 different wetlandscapes located in four different climate zones of the world. The thesis also systematically quantifies ecohydrological characteristics important for ecosystem service delivery and biodiversity support of wetlands and wetlandscapes in the Norrström Drainage basin located near Stockholm, Sweden. Conducted hydro-climatic analyses showed that impacts of climate change on wetlandscapes cannot be fully understood from average changes in climatic variables of the climate zones within which the wetlandscapes are located. This may be due to the fact that wetlands are not randomly and evenly distributed within climate zones, but may be located in areas subject to stronger climatic changes than regional means. In addition, anthropogenic pressures were on average shown to have higher impacts on runoff in wetlandscapes in comparison to climate change. The pressures however showed relatively large variability between different wetlandscapes, which needs to be considered in mitigation strategies against wetland degradation and deterioration. Similarly, regarding wetlandscape ecohydrological characteristics, results indicated that there are variability between wetlandscapes of different sizes, where larger wetlandscapes showed features that can support ecosystem services to larger degree than small wetlandscapes. Large spatial variability in wetland ecohydrological characteristics was also seen within a wetlandscape. For instance, water storage dynamics and buffering capacity varied depending on the position of the wetland in the landscape. These differences in hydrological conditions were shown to result in different inundation dynamics between wetlands, which for instance also showed to impact insect community composition.Overall, this thesis shows that assessments of wetland ecosystem services need to be addressed using a wetlandscape approach, combined with actual on site hydrological measurements. The approach used in this thesis could help decrease uncertainties related to the impacts of hydro-climatic changes and anthropogenic pressures on wetlands and wetlandscapes, supporting location-specific wetland management strategies related to creation, restoration and sustainable use of wetlands and their ecosystems.
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2.
  • Samnegård, Ulrika, 1985- (författare)
  • The impact of forest on pest damage, pollinators and pollination services in an Ethiopian agricultural landscape
  • 2016
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • The distribution of wild biodiversity in agroecosystems affect crop performance and yield in various ways. In this thesis I have studied the impact of wild biodiversity, in terms of trees and forest structures, on crop pests, pollinators and the pollination services provided in a heterogeneous landscape in southwestern Ethiopia. Coffee, Coffea arabica, is a forest shrub native to Ethiopia and is grown in most wooded areas in the landscape where I conducted my studies. Wild coffee is still found in remote parts of the forests in the landscape. For my first paper, I surveyed pest damage on coffee in coffee forest sites, where some sites were situated in continuous forest and some in isolated forest patches. I found the variation in pest damage frequency to mainly be among coffee plants within a site, rather than among sites, which indicates the importance of local processes. However, some pests were clearly connected to the forest habitat, such as the olive baboon.In my second study, I surveyed pollinators visiting coffee flowers across a gradient of shade-tree structures. I found the semi-wild honeybee to be the dominating flower visitor. The abundance of the honeybee was not related to shade-tree structures, but to amount of coffee flower resources in the site. On the other hand, other pollinators, which included other bee species and hoverflies, were positively affected by more shade trees in the site.In my third study I investigated how the forest cover affected local bee communities in the agricultural landscape. Moreover, I investigated if this relationship differed between the dry and rainy season. The distribution of food resources for bees changes between the seasons, which may affect the bees. Most trees, fruit trees and coffee, which are patchy resources, flowers in the dry season, whereas most herbs and annual crops, which are more evenly spread resources, flowers during the rainy season. I found a clear turnover in bee species composition between the dry and rainy season, with more mobile species in the dry season. Increased forest cover in the surrounding landscape had a positive impact on bee abundance and species richness. However, the impact did not change between seasons.In my fourth study I evaluated the pollination success and pollen limitation of a common oil crop in the landscape in relation to forest cover. I found severe pollen limitation across the landscape, which may be related to the observed low bee abundances. The pollen limitation was not related to surrounding forest cover.In conclusion, I have found the forest and wooded habitats to impact several mobile animals and pathogens in our study landscape, which in turn affect people. However, there is large complexity in nature and general relationships between forest structures and all crop related organisms may be unlikely to find. Various species are dependent on different resources, at different spatial scales and are interacting with several other species. To develop management strategies for increased pollination services, for reduced pest damage or for conservation in the landscape, more species-specific knowledge is needed.
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3.
  • Verschut, Thomas Alexander, 1988- (författare)
  • Searching for food in complex environments : Integrating processes at multiple spatial scales
  • 2017
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Resources are often unevenly distributed through the environment, resulting in a challenging task for insects to locate food, mates and oviposition sites. Consequently, there is an ongoing need to unravel how insects rely on behavioural and sensory traits while searching for resources in heterogeneous environments. In the first part of this thesis, I addressed this issue by studying how neighbouring resources can affect the likelihood of insects finding their preferred host resources. These effects of neighbouring resources are commonly referred to as associational effects, and are expected to result from limitations in the sensory physiology of insects. Such limitations constrain the insect’s ability to correctly evaluate resource quality at the different steps involved in insect search behaviour. Furthermore, I determined whether the physiological state of an insect, and sensory experiences made during larval stages, can affect host search behaviour in heterogeneous environments.By comparing the behaviour of Drosophila melanogaster in environments with single and multiple resources, I found that the presence of neighbouring recourses increased the selection rates for attractive resources, while it decreased the selection rates for less attractive resources. These effects are referred to as associational susceptibility and associational resistance respectively. Furthermore, by studying oviposition behaviour, I found that during these small-scale behavioural decisions, associational effects are mainly governed by gustatory mediated selection and less by olfactory mediated selection. The oviposition assay eliminated potential misinterpretations of resource quality along the different steps of search behaviour, hence the results suggested that associational effects rely on distinctive selection behaviour between resource types rather than on sensory constraints.In the second part of this thesis I determined whether natal experiences can be used by insects as sensory shortcuts to find host resources, and whether this leads to better larval performance on those selected host resources. For this purpose, I studied the interactions between the larval parasitoid Asecodes lucens and the oligophagous leaf beetle Galerucella sagittariae. The results showed that the relationship between oviposition preference and larval performance, of both insect species, depends on an interactive effect between the insects’ natal origin and the quality of the different host resources. Moreover, I found that the natal origin was a better predictor for the adult host preference, rather than for larval performance. This suggests that, aside from the actual quality of the host resources, locating any suitable host might be even more limiting for the female’s fitness. 
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4.
  • Horvath, Robert, 1988- (författare)
  • Population genomic analyses of regulatory variation and selection in Brassicaceae species
  • 2020
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • The impact of selection on regulatory variation and the contribution of regulatory changes to phenotypic variation has long been debated in evolutionary genetics. Because cis-regulatory elements such as promoters and enhancers can be difficult to identify, it has been more challenging to quantify the impact of selection on variation in cis-regulatory regions than in protein-coding regions. In this thesis, I use genomic tools to investigate gene expression variation and selection in Brassicaceae species. First, I investigated the genomic impact of selection on putative cis-regulatory regions in the genome of the crucifer species Capsella grandiflora (Brassicaceae) (Paper I). I used an assay for transposase-accessible chromatin with high throughput sequencing (ATAC-seq) to empirically identify putative cis-regulatory regions as those located in accessible chromatin regions (ACRs) in the genome of the crucifer species Capsella grandiflora. Based on whole-genome resequencing data from a natural population, I then showed that ACRs are under stronger purifying selection than other intergenic regions and that they are depleted for transposable element (TE) insertions and enriched for expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL), as would be expected if ACRs are enriched for functional elements affecting gene expression. Second, I explored how the location and silencing of transposable elements (TEs) affects selection against TEs (Paper II). Specifically, I tested a trade-off model on epigenetic TE silencing, according to which the positive effects of TE silencing on preventing TE movement conflict with negative effects of TE silencing on nearby gene expression. I found that TE silencing through the RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathway affects selection against TEs close to genes in C. grandiflora, which is consistent with the trade-off model. Third, I used Arabidopsis thaliana single-cell expression data to investigate the relationship between gene body methylation (gbM) and transcriptional regulation (Paper III). I found that there was an indirect correlation between gbM and gene expression noise as well as a direct correlation between gbM and gene expression consistency and potentially intron retention in Arabidopsis thaliana. Fourth, I investigated the impact of demographic history on genomic signatures of selection at linked sites (linked selection) (Paper IV). This study revealed that neutral genetic diversity in C. grandiflora with a stable effective population size is influenced by linked selection whereas in Arabidopsis lyrata, which underwent a recent and strong bottleneck, neutral diversity is mainly affected by population size change. In summary, this thesis offers new insights into determinants of gene expression variation, selection on genomic features linked to gene expression alteration, as well as on the effect of demographic history on linked selection patterns in Brassicaceae.
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5.
  • Kolb, Gundula S., 1978- (författare)
  • The impact of cormorant nesting colonies on plants and arthropods
  • 2010
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Seabirds concentrate large amounts of marine nutrients on their nesting islands. This nutrient input can have large consequences for island food webs and community structure. The high nutrient load may also cause runoff into surrounding waters and affect marine communities. In my thesis, I studied the effect of cormorant nesting colonies on the stoichiometry, abundance, species richness, and species composition of plants, algae, and invertebrates on land and in costal waters and investigated if differences in the elemental composition or homeostasis can explain differences in the numerical response among invertebrate groups. δ15N analysis indicated that ornithogenic nitrogen provided a significant nitrogen source for plants and arthropods on nesting islands and around high nest density islands also for brackish algae and invertebrates. Furthermore, nutrient runoff created a potential feed-back loop to spiders via chironomids. Cormorant nutrient input changed island vegetation and increased plant P and N content and epiphytic algae:Fucus ratio, but decreased plant species richness and vegetation cover. Invertebrates responded indirectly to these qualitative and quantitative changes in their food source and habitat, but also directly to cormorant subsidies. However not all taxonomic and feeding groups were affected and responses were both positive and negative. Differences in the numerical response among taxonomic groups could not be explained by differences in the level of homeostasis, since, generally, all invertebrates were strongly homeostatic. Similarly, consumer nutrient content was a poor predictor for displayed responses. I conclude that cormorant colonies have strong impacts on island vegetation and some consumer groups. However, even if they can decrease the species richness of some organism groups on their nesting islands, they increase the habitat heterogeneity in an archipelago and thus may increase the regional species diversity.
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6.
  • Andersson, Petter, 1975- (författare)
  • The importance of search behavior and movements for spatial distributions of herbivorous insects
  • 2011
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Insect populations commonly show large spatial variation in density, and much variation have been shown to be explained by the search behavior applied by the insect when locating habitat patches. This thesis explores the importance of odor-mediated attraction for immigration rates of herbivorous insects in relation to the size of the patches and the density of host plants within the patches. By using electroantennogram and measuring moth antennal responses to sex pheromones and thereby estimating the relative odor-mediated attraction from odor patches in field experiments (Paper I, III), I show that the length of the odor plumes emanating from the patches increase proportional with the square-root of the number of odor sources. In laboratory and field experiments (with the weevils Cionus scrophulariae and C. tuberculosus and the host plant figwort Scrophularia nodosa; Paper II) and meta-analyses on multiple insect herbivores (Paper III), I examined whether the relative increase in plume length could also predict the immigration rates of olfactory searching insects in relation to patches with increasing area and increasing density of host plants. The experiments (Paper II) and meta-analyses (Paper III) showed that the observed immigration rates of olfactory searching insects was well predicted by the relative increase in plume length, as estimated from the electroantennogram measurements (Paper I, III). The importance of immigration rates, relative to the effect of emigration and local growth was also investigated for the Cionus weevils in natural S. nodosa patches (Paper IV). This study showed that the density-patch size relationships of the weevils during early season were predicted by the net scaling of emigration and immigration rates, and differences in density-patch size relationships between the two species could be explained by inter-specific differences in their emigration rates from small patches. In conclusion, this thesis shows that search behavior can be used to predict immigration rates and spatial distributions of insects, with implications for pest control, conservation ecology and general ecological theory.
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7.
  • Faticov, Maria, 1991- (författare)
  • Spatial and temporal ecology of oak-associated fungal communities
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Plants host a large diversity of microorganisms, which includes fungi, bacteria and archaea. Among these, fungi are highly diverse, and known to play a vital role in plant health and in regulation of the essential ecosystem functions. Nevertheless, we still lack a comprehensive understanding of the forces structuring plant-associated fungal communities in space and time. The main aim of this thesis was to decipher the drivers of the spatial patterns and temporal dynamics of fungal communities on plants. To this aim, I focused on Quercus robur and its associated fungi. Using a combination of observational and experimental studies, I assessed i) the distribution and drivers of the above- and belowground fungal communities at the landscape scale; ii) the role of climatic and trophic factors in defining the niches of cryptic species within a pathogen complex on oak and iii) the relative importance of warming, plant genotype and their interaction in shaping oak phenology and the seasonal dynamics of the associated fungal and insect communities.I found that aboveground fungal communities were highly variable among leaves within a single tree, and that belowground fungal communities had a stronger spatial structure than aboveground fungi at the landscape scale. Yet, climate, tree phenology or the distribution of the host tree did not explain spatial patterns in the above- and belowground communities. When focusing on three cryptic powdery mildew species within a pathogen complex on oak, I demonstrated that the climatic dimension is more important than the species interaction dimension for niche differentiation of these cryptic pathogens. A field heating experiment showed strong seasonal change in the structure of the foliar fungal community, with experimental warming playing an important role in driving this change. This experiment also revealed that warming and plant genotype jointly shape plant phenology, disease levels and insect abundance across the growing season.In conclusion, my findings suggest that abiotic forces can override biotic forces in structuring spatial patterns and temporal dynamics of fungal communities associated with plants. The particularly strong impact of warmer temperatures on foliar fungi in some of my studies indicates that climate warming has the potential to structure foliar fungal communities, with important implications for plant health, interactions between plants and other organisms and ecosystem functions.
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8.
  • Fors, Lisa, 1976- (författare)
  • Ecology and evolution in a host-parasitoid system : Host search, immune responses and parasitoid virulence
  • 2015
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • In host-parasitoid systems, there is a continuous coevolutionary arms race where each species imposes a strong selection pressure on the other. The host needs to develop defence strategies in order to escape parasitism and the parasitoid must evolve counter-defence strategies in order to overcome the host’s immune defence and successfully reproduce. This makes host-parasitoid systems excellent model systems for understanding evolutionary processes underlying host race formation and speciation. In order to gain a better understanding of the complexity of host-parasitoid interactions several aspects must be considered, such as search behaviour and host selection in the parasitoid, the development of immune responses in the host and counter-defence strategies in the parasitoid. In this thesis, I investigate interactions and coevolution in a natural host-parasitoid system, consisting of five species of Galerucella leaf beetles and three species of Asecodes parasitoids, by combining behavioural ecology with chemical ecology and immunology. In the studies performed, I found that pheromone production and responses in the beetles are connected to the phylogenetic relatedness between the Galerucella species (Paper I). I found no evidence that Asecodes exploits the adult pheromone to locate host larvae, but observed an ability in the parasitoids to distinguish a better host from a less suitable one based on larval odors (Paper II). The studies also revealed large differences in immune competence between the Galerucella species, which were linked to differences in hemocyte composition in the beetle larvae (Paper III, IV). Further, the results suggest that parasitism success in polyphagous Asecodes is strongly affected by former host species of the parasitoid (Paper IV). In conclusion, the results of this thesis suggest an on-going evolution in both parasitoid virulence and host immune responses in the Asecodes-Galerucella system.
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9.
  • Lemessa, Debissa, 1973- (författare)
  • Pests and pest controlling organisms across tropical agroecological landscapes in relation to forest and tree-cover
  • 2014
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • A major challenge in agroecosystems is how to manage the systems so that it reduces crop pests and enhances natural pest control. This thesis investigates patterns of crop pests and top-down effects of birds and arthropod predators in relation to land-use composition across spatial scales. In paper (I) I examined the crop distribution and land-use types in relation to the crop raiding patterns in 15 transectsin sites close to and far from forests along with a questionnaire survey at household level. I found severe crop raiding close to forests, but it had no impact on crop composition growing between the two sites. In paper (II) I examined the effect of forest and tree cover, at local and landscape scales, on the abundance of arthropod predators by collecting specimens from 40 home gardens. My result showed higher abundance of arthropod predators when either the home garden or the surroundings had a high tree-cover, compared to when tree-cover at both scales was similarly either high or low. In paper (III) I investigated the effect of excluding birds and arthropod predators on leaf damage on rape seed in 26 home gardens. I found stronger top-down impacts from arthropod predators on crop pests in tree-poor gardens than in tree-rich gardens. There was no effect of birds. In paper (IV) I explored the effect of landscape complexity on bird and arthropod predation using plasticine caterpillars in 36 home gardens across landscapes. The rate of arthropod predation on caterpillars was higher in simple than in complex landscapes. The rate of bird predation did not vary between complex and simple landscapes. In simple landscapes, arthropod predation was higher than that of birds. The overall results suggest that simplified gardens/landscapes still have enough habitat heterogeneity to support arthropod predators for the significant top-down controlling effect on crop pests. However, I did not find clear effect of complexityon the top-down effect of birds.
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10.
  • Mellbrand, Kajsa, 1975- (författare)
  • The Spider and the Sea : Effects of marine subsidies on the role of spiders in terrestrial food webs
  • 2009
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • The purpose of this study was to identify if terrestrial arthropod predators on Baltic Sea shores vary in their use of marine versus terrestrial food items, and to construct a bottom-up food web for Baltic Sea shores. The inflow of marine nutrients in the area consists mainly of marine algal detritus and emerging aquatic insects (e.g. phantom midges, Chironomidae). Diets of coastal arthropods were examined using carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis, and a two source mixing model was used to examine proportions of marine carbon to diets. The results suggest that spiders are the terrestrial predators mainly utilizing nutrients and energy of marine origin on Baltic Sea shores, while insect predators such as beetles and hemipterans mainly utilize nutrients and energy derived from terrestrial sources, possibly due to differences in hunting behaviour. That spiders are the predators that benefit the most from the marine inflow suggest that eventual effects of marine subsidies for the coastal ecosystem as a whole are likely mediated by spiders.
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