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Search: WFRF:(Johannesson Kerstin)

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  • Johannesson, Kerstin, 1955, et al. (author)
  • Oceanographic barriers to gene flow promote genetic subdivision of the tunicate Ciona intestinalis in a North Sea archipelago
  • 2018
  • In: Marine Biology. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 0025-3162 .- 1432-1793. ; 165:8
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Pelagic larval development has the potential to connect populations over large geographic distances and prevent genetic structuring. The solitary tunicate Ciona intestinalis has pelagic eggs and a swimming larval stage lasting for maximum a few days, with the potential for a homogenizing gene flow over relatively large areas. In the eastern North Sea, it is found in a geomorphologically complex archipelago with a mix of fjords and open costal habitats. Here, the coastal waters are also stratified with a marked pycnocline driven by salinity and temperature differences between shallow and deep waters. We investigated the genetic structure of C. intestinalis in this area and compared it with oceanographic barriers to dispersal that would potentially reduce connectivity among local populations. Genetic data from 240 individuals, sampled in 2 shallow, and 4 deep-water sites, showed varying degrees of differentiation among samples (F (ST) = 0.0-0.11). We found no evidence for genetic isolation by distance, but two distant deep-water sites from the open coast were genetically very similar indicating a potential for long-distance gene flow. However, samples from different depths from the same areas were clearly differentiated, and fjord samples were different from open-coast sites. A biophysical model estimating multi-generation, stepping-stone larval connectivity, and empirical data on fjord water mass retention time showed the presence of oceanographic barriers that explained the genetic structure observed. We conclude that the local pattern of oceanographic connectivity will impact on the genetic structure of C. intestinalis in this region.
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  • Andersson, Björn, 1985, et al. (author)
  • Cross-contamination risks in sediment-based resurrection studies of phytoplankton
  • 2022
  • In: Limnology and Oceanography Letters. - : Wiley. - 2378-2242. ; 8:2, s. 376-84
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Resurrection studies can answer some fundamental questions in aquatic ecology and evolutionary biology. For phytoplankton resting stages, longevity of thousands to millions of years has recently been reported. However, contamination during sediment sampling could distort these estimates, and this risk has not been systematically evaluated. Here we used 4.5 mu m diameter microspheres to quantify contamination while reviving the resting stages of seven abundant estuarine diatom and cyanobacterial taxa. We observed a sharp decline in resting stages abundance from 10(6) (g wet sediment)(-1) at the surface to < 0.8 (g wet sediment)(-1) at 12.5 cm depth. Added microspheres (similar to 4.5 x 10(7) cm(-2)) were translocated even deeper down the sediment and could well explain the vertical distributions and abundances of revived cells. Without this control, we could have claimed to have revived seven multi-decades to centennial-old taxa. Our findings suggest that improved contamination controls are needed for sediment core sampling of rare cells, microfossils, or DNA molecules.
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  • Andersson, Björn, et al. (author)
  • Strain-specific metabarcoding reveals rapid evolution of copper tolerance in populations of the coastal diatom Skeletonema marinoi
  • 2023
  • In: Molecular Ecology. - 0962-1083 .- 1365-294X.
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Phytoplankton have short generation times, flexible reproduction strategies, large population sizes and high standing genetic diversity, traits that should facilitate rapid evolution under directional selection. We quantified local adaptation of copper tolerance in a population of the diatom Skeletonema marinoi from a mining-exposed inlet in the Baltic Sea and in a non-exposed population 100 km away. We hypothesized that mining pollution has driven evolution of elevated copper tolerance in the impacted population of S. marinoi. Assays of 58 strains originating from sediment resting stages revealed no difference in the average tolerance to copper between the two populations. However, variation within populations was greater at the mining site, with three strains displaying hyper-tolerant phenotypes. In an artificial evolution experiment, we used a novel intraspecific metabarcoding locus to track selection and quantify fitness of all 58 strains during co-cultivation in one control and one toxic copper treatment. As expected, the hyper-tolerant strains enabled rapid evolution of copper tolerance in the mining-exposed population through selection on available strain diversity. Within 42 days, in each experimental replicate a single strain dominated (30%–99% abundance) but different strains dominated the different treatments. The reference population developed tolerance beyond expectations primarily due to slowly developing plastic response in one strain, suggesting that different modes of copper tolerance are present in the two populations. Our findings provide novel empirical evidence that standing genetic diversity of phytoplankton resting stage allows populations to evolve rapidly (20–50 generations) and flexibly on timescales relevant for seasonal bloom progressions.
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  • Andersson, Leif, et al. (author)
  • Ecological adaptation in cod and herring and possible consequences of future climate change in the Baltic Sea
  • 2023
  • In: Frontiers in Marine Science. - : Frontiers Media S.A.. - 2296-7745. ; 10
  • Research review (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The Atlantic herring and Atlantic cod are two marine fish species that have successfully adapted to the brackish Baltic Sea, and the former is able to spawn in near-freshwater conditions in the inner Gulf of Bothnia. Here, we review the state of current knowledge concerning ecological adaptation in the two species and make an attempt to predict how they will be able to cope with future climate change. Previous whole genome sequencing studies in Atlantic herring have revealed hundreds of genetic loci underlying ecological adaptation, including several loci that show very strong associations to variation in salinity and temperature. These results suggest the existence of standing genetic variation available for adaptation to a changing environment. However, although Atlantic herring probably has the genetic potential to adapt, its future status also depends on how climate change will affect plankton production and competing species, such as sprat and three-spined stickleback. In cod, the situation is challenging, as there is only one true Baltic population, spawning east of Bornholm and then dispersing towards the east and north. This Baltic cod population is threatened by overfishing, low oxygen levels in benthic waters and generally bad physiological condition of individual fish, in addition to being completely isolated from gene flow from nearby cod populations at the entrance of the Baltic Sea.
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  • Ardehed, Angelica, et al. (author)
  • Complex spatial clonal structure in the macroalgae Fucus radicans with both sexual and asexual recruitment
  • 2015
  • In: Ecology and Evolution. - : Wiley. - 2045-7758. ; 5:19, s. 4233-4245
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In dioecious species with both sexual and asexual reproduction, the spatial distribution of individual clones affects the potential for sexual reproduction and local adaptation. The seaweed Fucus radicans, endemic to the Baltic Sea, has separate sexes, but new attached thalli may also form asexually. We mapped the spatial distribution of clones (multilocus genotypes, MLGs) over macrogeographic (>500km) and microgeographic (<100m) scales in the Baltic Sea to assess the relationship between clonal spatial structure, sexual recruitment, and the potential for natural selection. Sexual recruitment was predominant in some areas, while in others asexual recruitment dominated. Where clones of both sexes were locally intermingled, sexual recruitment was nevertheless low. In some highly clonal populations, the sex ratio was strongly skewed due to dominance of one or a few clones of the same sex. The two largest clones (one female and one male) were distributed over 100-550km of coast and accompanied by small and local MLGs formed by somatic mutations and differing by 1-2 mutations from the large clones. Rare sexual events, occasional long-distance migration, and somatic mutations contribute new genotypic variation potentially available to natural selection. However, dominance of a few very large (and presumably old) clones over extensive spatial and temporal scales suggested that either these have superior traits or natural selection has only been marginally involved in the structuring of genotypes.
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  • Ardehed, Angelica, et al. (author)
  • Divergence within and among Seaweed Siblings (Fucus vesiculosus and F. radicans) in the Baltic Sea
  • 2016
  • In: Plos One. - : Public Library of Science (PLoS). - 1932-6203. ; 11:8
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Closely related taxa provide significant case studies for understanding evolution of new species but may simultaneously challenge species identification and definition. In the Baltic Sea, two dominant and perennial brown algae share a very recent ancestry. Fucus vesiculosus invaded this recently formed postglacial sea 8000 years ago and shortly thereafter Fucus radicans diverged from this lineage as an endemic species. In the Baltic Sea both species reproduce sexually but also recruit fully fertile new individuals by asexual fragmentation. Earlier studies have shown local differences in morphology and genetics between the two taxa in the northern and western Bothnian Sea, and around the island of Saaremaa in Estonia, but geographic patterns seemin conflict with a single origin of F. radicans. To investigate the relationship between northern and Estonian distributions, we analysed the genetic variation using 9 microsatellite loci in populations from eastern Bothnian Sea, Archipelago Sea and the Gulf of Finland. These populations are located in between earlier studied populations. However, instead of bridging the disparate genetic gap between N-W Bothnian Sea and Estonia, as expected from a simple isolation-by-distance model, the new populations substantially increased overall genetic diversity and showed to be strongly divergent from the two earlier analysed regions, showing signs of additional distinct populations. Contrasting earlier findings of increased asexual recruitment in low salinity in the Bothnian Sea, we found high levels of sexual reproduction in some of the Gulf of Finland populations that inhabit extremely low salinity. The new data generated in this study supports the earlier conclusion of two reproductively isolated but very closely related species. However, the new results also add considerable genetic and morphological complexity within species. This makes species separation at geographic scales more demanding and suggests a need for more comprehensive approaches to further disentangle the intriguing relationship and history of the Baltic Sea fucoids.
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  • Arnberg, Filip, Docent i klinisk psykologi, 1981-, et al. (author)
  • Development and Pilot-testing of the Swedish Version of the PTSD Coach
  • 2016
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In Sweden, four out of five people have smartphones, indicating the potential to increase the reach of low- intensity support after trauma via smartphone-apps to aid recovery. While there are many apps in the mental health field available to the general public, their effects are rarely evaluated. The PTSD Coach smartphone-app was developed by the VA ́s National Center for PTSD—Dissemination and Training Division. A Swedish version was developed by using existing code while making adjustment to the content for a Swedish context with a view for use by both civilians and veterans. A pilot study is underway and the findings will be used to inform a larger efficacy study. To date, 31 participants have been recruited to the pilot study, in which they use the Swedish version of the PTSD Coach for four weeks. Pre- and post- assessments include a structured clinical interview (MINI), PCL-5, PHQ-9 and the Swedish version of the PTSD Coach Survey. The participants’ experiences with using the app are explored in focus groups. During this presentation, the adaptation for the Swedish PTSD Coach will be outlined and experiences from the development and pilot study of the Swedish version will be described. 
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  • Result 1-10 of 209
Type of publication
journal article (166)
conference paper (10)
book chapter (9)
reports (8)
research review (6)
other publication (5)
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book (3)
doctoral thesis (2)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (167)
other academic/artistic (32)
pop. science, debate, etc. (9)
Author/Editor
Johannesson, Kerstin ... (138)
Panova, Marina, 1973 (30)
Bergh Johannesson, K ... (30)
André, Carl, 1958 (29)
Butlin, Roger, 1955 (29)
Michel, Per-Olof (20)
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Pereyra, Ricardo T., ... (17)
Bergh Johannesson, K ... (17)
Lundin, Tom (16)
Rafajlović, Marina, ... (16)
Jonsson, Per R., 195 ... (14)
Johannesson, Kerstin (12)
Kautsky, Lena (11)
Faria, R (9)
Arnberg, Filip K, 19 ... (8)
Blomberg, Anders, 19 ... (7)
Havenhand, Jonathan ... (7)
Johansson, Daniel H, ... (7)
Hultman, Christina M (7)
Faria, Rui (7)
Töpel, Mats H., 1973 (6)
Mehlig, Bernhard, 19 ... (6)
Arnberg, Filip, Doce ... (6)
Larsson, Tomas (5)
Pavia, Henrik, 1964 (5)
Erlandsson, Johan (5)
Westram, Anja Marie, ... (5)
Alm Rosenblad, Magnu ... (4)
Ortega-Martínez, Olg ... (4)
Godhe, Anna, 1967 (4)
Sveen, Josefin, Doce ... (4)
Bondjers, Kristina (4)
De Wit, Pierre, 1978 (4)
Kinnby, Alexandra, 1 ... (4)
Johansson, Tomas (3)
Munthe, John (3)
Nilsson, Doris (3)
Nordin, Annika (3)
Kvarnemo, Charlotta, ... (3)
Vahter, Marie (3)
Sörlin, Sverker (3)
Cernvall, Martin, 19 ... (3)
Rockström, Johan (3)
Ledin, Anna (3)
Laikre, Linda (3)
Moksnes, Per-Olav, 1 ... (3)
Ring, Anna-Karin, 19 ... (3)
Ardehed, Angelica (3)
Arnberg, Filip K (3)
Berdan, Emma L, 1983 (3)
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University
University of Gothenburg (141)
Uppsala University (53)
Stockholm University (17)
Lund University (13)
Karolinska Institutet (9)
Linköping University (4)
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Luleå University of Technology (3)
Marie Cederschiöld högskola (3)
Kristianstad University College (2)
Umeå University (2)
Royal Institute of Technology (2)
Swedish Environmental Protection Agency (2)
Chalmers University of Technology (2)
University of Borås (2)
Karlstad University (2)
Swedish Museum of Natural History (2)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (2)
Södertörn University (1)
University of Skövde (1)
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Language
English (181)
Swedish (28)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (149)
Medical and Health Sciences (34)
Social Sciences (22)
Engineering and Technology (2)
Agricultural Sciences (1)

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