0000000000427032

AUTHOR

Pekka Helle

showing 9 related works from this author

Large-scale drainage and breeding success in boreal forest grouse

2007

Summary 1 The breeding success of Finnish grouse has been in decline for decades. While it has been shown that fragmentation and modern forestry practices such as clear-cutting affect the viability of grouse populations, little is known about effects of large-scale drainage. The drainage network in Finland has increased dramatically during the past decades. By 1988, 6 million ha of bog ecosystems had been drained. This is likely to have had a profound direct and indirect effects on grouse productivity. Because ditches persist in time, large-scale drainage may therefore have strong potential for affecting the long-term breeding success of three forest grouse species in Finland. 2 Using a mix…

geography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyHazel grouseForest managementDitchGrousebiology.organism_classificationBlack grouseGeographyConservation statusmedia_common.cataloged_instanceDrainageEuropean unionmedia_commonJournal of Applied Ecology
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Alarm calling by individual willow tits, Parus montanus

1990

Abstract Alarm responses of wild-captured individual willow tits to model sparrowhawks, Accipiter nisus, flying over a test chamber were studied. Tits did not usually give alarm calls if the apparent predator was passing nearby (at a height of 10 m), while over half of the individuals responded by alarm calling for a more distant predator (40 m). This suggests that alarm calling involves a risk to the caller. Second, there was individual variation in the responses, with older males giving the call more frequently than females or young males. The greater responsiveness of adult males may indicate that different individuals in a flock gain different benefits by warning the others. The tendenc…

WillowbiologyEcologyAccipiterbiology.organism_classificationAlarm signalALARMParus montanusAnimal Science and ZoologyFlockPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsYoung maleDemographyAnimal Behaviour
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Short- and long-term population dynamical consequences of asymmetric climate change in black grouse

2006

Temporal asymmetry in patterns of regional climate change may jeopardize the match between the proximate and ultimate cues of the timing of breeding. The consequences on short- and long-term population dynamics and trends as well as the underlying mechanisms are, however, often unknown. Using long-term data from Finland, we demonstrate that black grouse ( Tetrao tetrix ) have responded to spring warming by advancing both egg-laying and hatching. However, early summer (the time of hatching) has not advanced, and chicks have to face colder post-hatching conditions. Demonstrating that these conditions are critical to post-hatching survival, we show that chicks are increasingly suffering highe…

Greenhouse EffectClimatePopulationPopulation DynamicsClimate changeGrouseTetraoModels BiologicalGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySexual Behavior AnimalClimate change scenarioAnimalsGalliformeseducationFinlandGeneral Environmental Scienceeducation.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyEcologyPopulation sizeGlobal warmingGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationBlack grouseAdaptation PhysiologicalGeographyembryonic structuresSeasonsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesDemographyResearch Article
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Top predators, mesopredators and their prey: interference ecosystems along bioclimatic productivity gradients

2010

1. The Mesopredator Release Hypothesis (MRH) suggests that top predator suppression of mesopredators is a key ecosystem function with cascading impacts on herbivore prey, but it remains to be shown that this top-down cascade impacts the large-scale structure of ecosystems. 2. The Exploitation Ecosystems Hypothesis (EEH) predicts that regional ecosystem structures are determined by top-down exploitation and bottom-up productivity. In contrast to MRH, EEH assumes that interference among predators has a negligible impact on the structure of ecosystems with three trophic levels. 3. We use the recolonization of a top predator in a three-level boreal ecosystem as a natural experiment to test if l…

Biomass (ecology)Food ChainEcologyPopulation DynamicsFoxesBoreal ecosystemModels TheoreticalBiologyHaresMesopredator release hypothesisProductivity (ecology)LynxAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyEcosystemTerrestrial ecosystemBiomassEcosystemFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsApex predatorTrophic levelJournal of Animal Ecology
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Predator–vole interactions in northern Europe: the role of small mustelids revised

2014

The cyclic population dynamics of vole and predator communities is a key phenomenon in northern ecosystems, and it appears to be influenced by climate change. Reports of collapsing rodent cycles have attributed the changes to warmer winters, which weaken the interaction between voles and their specialist subnivean predators. Using population data collected throughout Finland during 1986–2011, we analyse the spatio-temporal variation in the interactions between populations of voles and specialist, generalist and avian predators, and investigate by simulations the roles of the different predators in the vole cycle. We test the hypothesis that vole population cyclicity is dependent on predator…

0106 biological sciencesClimate ChangePopulation DynamicsPopulationBiologyGeneralist and specialist species010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyPredationBirdsAnimalsPopulation growthpopulation growth rateeducationResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental ScienceMammalsPopulation Densityeducation.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyArvicolinaeEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyGeneral MedicineModels Theoreticalbiology.organism_classificationpopulaatiodynamiikkaEuropeDensity dependence13. Climate actiondensity dependencePredatory BehaviorDelayed density dependencePopulation cycleta1181Volepopulation cyclesGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences
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Individual and Environmental Determinants of Daily Black Grouse Nest Survival Rates at Variable Predator Densities

2010

Nest predation in ground nesting black grouse (Tetrao tetrix) inhabiting managed boreal forests is arguably the single most important cause of nesting failure. Little is known, however, about indirect effects of other factors, such as maternal or environmental properties, and to what extent maternal and habitat qualities interact with varying levels of predator densities. Using an information-theoretical approach, we studied maternal and environmental determinants of daily nest survival rates under variable predator densities of 210 individual black grouse hens in central Finland. Environmental determinants were far more important than maternal ones, and the effects were more apparent at hi…

EcologybiologyEcologyTaigaTetraoBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationPredationNestHabitatAfforestationAnimal Science and ZoologyPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationAnnales Zoologici Fennici
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Predation as a landscape effect: the trading off by prey species between predation risks and protection benefits.

2007

1. Predators impose costs on their prey but may also provide benefits such as protection against other (e.g. nest) predators. The optimal breeding location in relation to the distance from a nesting raptor varies so as to minimize the sum of costs of adult and nest predation. We provide a conceptual model to account for variation in the relative predation risks and derive qualitative predictions for how different prey species should respond to the distance from goshawk Accipiter gentilis nests. 2. We test the model predictions using a comprehensive collection of data from northern Finland and central Norway. First, we carried out a series of experiments with artificial bird nests to test if…

MaleCost-Benefit AnalysisOvipositionForagingPopulation DynamicsRisk AssessmentPredationNesting BehaviorBirdsSongbirdsNestSpecies SpecificityAbundance (ecology)AnimalsNest boxEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPopulation DensitybiologyRaptorsEcologyReproductionAccipiterBird nestbiology.organism_classificationHabitatPredatory BehaviorAnimal Science and ZoologyFemaleThe Journal of animal ecology
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Data from: Predator–vole interactions in northern Europe: the role of small mustelids revised

2014

The cyclic population dynamics of vole and predator communities is a key phenomenon in northern ecosystems, and it appears to be influenced by climate change. Reports of collapsing rodent cycles have attributed the changes to warmer winters, which weaken the interaction between voles and their specialist subnivean predators. Using population data collected throughout Finland during 1986–2011, we analyse the spatio-temporal variation in the interactions between populations of voles and specialist, generalist and avian predators, and investigate by simulations the roles of the different predators in the vole cycle. We test the hypothesis that vole population cyclicity is dependent on predator…

medicine and health careVolePopulation cyclesLife SciencesMedicinepopulation growth rate
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The effect of human-modified landscape structure on forest grouse broods in two landscape types

2018

The population sizes and the breeding success of Finnish tetraonids have been decreasing for decades. In this study, the presence of a grouse hen with a brood in a landscape was used to indicate habitat-related breeding success. We combined the locations of 938 black grouse (Tetrao tetrix), 388 capercaillie (T. urogallus), and 917 hazel grouse (Tetrastes bonasia) broods after the breeding season in mid-August with landscape data by employing Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and grouse data derived from the Finnish wildlife triangle censuses conducted during 1997–2004. Two large study areas with different landscape structures; northern forest-mire area and southern cultivated area, were …

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