Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 83
Filter
1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(20): e2303846121, 2024 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38709920

ABSTRACT

Habitat loss and isolation caused by landscape fragmentation represent a growing threat to global biodiversity. Existing theory suggests that the process will lead to a decline in metapopulation viability. However, since most metapopulation models are restricted to simple networks of discrete habitat patches, the effects of real landscape fragmentation, particularly in stochastic environments, are not well understood. To close this major gap in ecological theory, we developed a spatially explicit, individual-based model applicable to realistic landscape structures, bridging metapopulation ecology and landscape ecology. This model reproduced classical metapopulation dynamics under conventional model assumptions, but on fragmented landscapes, it uncovered general dynamics that are in stark contradiction to the prevailing views in the ecological and conservation literature. Notably, fragmentation can give rise to a series of dualities: a) positive and negative responses to environmental noise, b) relative slowdown and acceleration in density decline, and c) synchronization and desynchronization of local population dynamics. Furthermore, counter to common intuition, species that interact locally ("residents") were often more resilient to fragmentation than long-ranging "migrants." This set of findings signals a need to fundamentally reconsider our approach to ecosystem management in a noisy and fragmented world.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Ecosystem , Population Dynamics , Conservation of Natural Resources , Models, Biological , Animals , Models, Theoretical
2.
Ecol Lett ; 23(5): 851-859, 2020 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32207239

ABSTRACT

It has been hypothesised that the 2-year oscillations in abundance of Xestia moths are mediated by interactions with 1-year Ophion parasitoid wasps. We tested this hypothesis by modelling a 35-year time series of Xestia and Ophion from Northern Finland. Additionally, we used DNA barcoding to ascertain the species diversity of Ophion and targeted amplicon sequencing of their gut contents to confirm their larval hosts. Modelling of the time-series data strongly supported the hypothesised host-parasitoid dynamics and that periodic occurrence of Xestia moths is mediated by Ophion. DNA barcodes revealed that Ophion included five species rather than just one while targeted amplicon sequencing verified that Ophion does parasitise Xestia. At least one Ophion species employs 1-year Syngrapha interrogationis as an alternate host, but it did not detectably affect Xestia-Ophion dynamics. We also demonstrate the previously unrecognised complexity of this system due to cryptic parasitoid diversity.


Subject(s)
Moths , Wasps , Animals , Finland , Host-Parasite Interactions , Larva , Sequence Analysis, DNA
3.
J Anim Ecol ; 88(8): 1202-1214, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31077598

ABSTRACT

Inbreeding is common in nature, and many laboratory studies have documented that inbreeding depression can reduce the fitness of individuals. Demonstrating the consequences of inbreeding depression on the growth and persistence of populations is more challenging because populations are often regulated by density- or frequency-dependent selection and influenced by demographic and environmental stochasticity. A few empirical studies have shown that inbreeding depression can increase extinction risk of local populations. The importance of inbreeding depression at the metapopulation level has been conjectured based on population-level studies but has not been evaluated. We quantified the impact of inbreeding depression affecting the fitness of individuals on metapopulation persistence in heterogeneous habitat networks of different sizes and habitat configuration in a context of natural butterfly metapopulations. We developed a spatial individual-based simulation model of metapopulations with explicit genetics. We used Approximate Bayesian Computation to fit the model to extensive demographic, genetic and life-history data available for the well-studied Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) metapopulations in the Åland islands in SW Finland. We compared 18 semi-independent habitat networks differing in size and fragmentation. The results show that inbreeding is more frequent in small habitat networks, and consequently, inbreeding depression elevates extinction risks in small metapopulations. Metapopulation persistence and neutral genetic diversity maintained in the metapopulations increase with the total habitat amount in and mean patch size of habitat networks. Dispersal and mating behaviour interact with landscape structure to determine how likely it is to encounter kin while looking for mates. Inbreeding depression can decrease the viability of small metapopulations even when they are strongly influenced by stochastic extinction-colonization dynamics and density-dependent selection. The findings from this study support that genetic factors, in addition to demographic factors, can contribute to extinctions of small local populations and also of metapopulations.


Subject(s)
Butterflies , Inbreeding Depression , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Ecosystem , Finland , Population Dynamics
4.
J Allergy Clin Immunol ; 143(3): 1198-1206.e12, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30097187

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Sufficient exposure to natural environments, in particular soil and its microbes, has been suggested to be protective against allergies. OBJECTIVE: We aim at gaining more direct evidence of the environment-microbiota-health axis by studying the colonization of gut microbiota in mice after exposure to soil and by examining immune status in both a steady-state situation and during allergic inflammation. METHODS: The gastrointestinal microbiota of mice housed on clean bedding or in contact with soil was analyzed by using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and the data were combined with immune parameters measured in the gut mucosa, lung tissue, and serum samples. RESULTS: We observed marked differences in the small intestinal and fecal microbiota composition between mice housed on clean bedding or in contact with soil, with a higher proportion of Bacteroidetes relative to Firmicutes in the soil group. The housing environment also influenced mouse intestinal gene expression, as shown by upregulated expression of the immunoregulatory markers IL-10, forkhead box P3, and cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated protein 4 in the soil group. Importantly, using the murine asthma model, we found that exposure to soil polarizes the immune system toward TH1 and a higher level of anti-inflammatory signaling, alleviating TH2-type allergic responses. The inflammatory status of the mice had a marked influence on the composition of the gut microbiota, suggesting bidirectional communication along the gut-lung axis. CONCLUSION: Our results provide evidence of the role of environmentally acquired microbes in alleviating against TH2-driven inflammation, which relates to allergic diseases.


Subject(s)
Asthma/immunology , Asthma/microbiology , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Immune Tolerance , Soil Microbiology , Allergens/immunology , Animals , Cytokines/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Feces/microbiology , Female , Intestine, Small/microbiology , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Ovalbumin/immunology , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Soil
5.
Theor Popul Biol ; 124: 31-40, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30121328

ABSTRACT

Empirical studies have shown that, unlike species with specialized resource requirements, generalist species may benefit from habitat destruction. We use a family of models to probe the causes of the contrasting responses of these two types of species to habitat destruction. Our approach allows a number of mechanisms to be switched on and off, thereby making it possible to study their marginal and joint effects. Unlike many previous models, we do not assume any intrinsic competitive asymmetry between the species, and we assume pre-emptive rather than displacement competition. Under these assumptions, in the mean-field model the prevalences of all species decrease monotonically with decreasing habitat availability, independently of the degree of specialization. However, in the stochastic and spatial individual-based simulations of the same model, the specialists dominate in landscapes of high quality, whereas generalists thrive in landscapes of intermediate quality; no species persist in very poor landscapes. The same pattern also occurs in a non-spatial stochastic model but not in a deterministic spatial model, showing that demographic stochasticity plays a key role in shaping the outcome of competitive interactions.


Subject(s)
Ecological and Environmental Phenomena , Ecosystem , Models, Biological , Computer Simulation , Demography , Extinction, Biological , Fungi/genetics , Genetic Heterogeneity , Population Dynamics , Stochastic Processes
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(19): 4897-4902, 2018 05 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29686089

ABSTRACT

A rural environment and farming lifestyle are known to provide protection against allergic diseases. This protective effect is expected to be mediated via exposure to environmental microbes that are needed to support a normal immune tolerance. However, the triangle of interactions between environmental microbes, host microbiota, and immune system remains poorly understood. Here, we have studied these interactions using a canine model (two breeds, n = 169), providing an intermediate approach between complex human studies and artificial mouse model studies. We show that the skin microbiota reflects both the living environment and the lifestyle of a dog. Remarkably, the prevalence of spontaneous allergies is also associated with residential environment and lifestyle, such that allergies are most common among urban dogs living in single-person families without other animal contacts, and least common among rural dogs having opposite lifestyle features. Thus, we show that living environment and lifestyle concurrently associate with skin microbiota and allergies, suggesting that these factors might be causally related. Moreover, microbes commonly found on human skin tend to dominate the urban canine skin microbiota, while environmental microbes are rich in the rural canine skin microbiota. This in turn suggests that skin microbiota is a feasible indicator of exposure to environmental microbes. As short-term exposure to environmental microbes via exercise is not associated with allergies, we conclude that prominent and sustained exposure to environmental microbiotas should be promoted by urban planning and lifestyle changes to support health of urban populations.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure , Hypersensitivity , Microbiota/immunology , Skin , Animals , Dogs , Female , Humans , Hypersensitivity/immunology , Hypersensitivity/microbiology , Male , Mice , Skin/immunology , Skin/microbiology , Social Planning , Urban Renewal
8.
Duodecim ; 133(1): 19-26, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29199805

ABSTRACT

The prevention of many diseases has significantly improved by intervening in known risk factors. However, the causes of the increase in allergy and type 1 diabetes are unknown. These diseases are often associated with a low-grade inflammation and immunological imbalance. The lifestyle and environment of urbanized populations have changed causing imbalance in the human normal flora and affecting immune regulation. We discuss everyday factors affecting immune regulation, using allergy as an example. Health may be promoted through the "nature step", by supporting the connection between humans and nature.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/immunology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/prevention & control , Hypersensitivity/immunology , Hypersensitivity/prevention & control , Inflammation/immunology , Primary Prevention , Environment , Humans , Life Style , Risk Factors
9.
PeerJ ; 5: e3371, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28560112

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Adaptation to local habitat conditions may lead to the natural divergence of populations in life-history traits such as body size, time of reproduction, mate signaling or dispersal capacity. Given enough time and strong enough selection pressures, populations may experience local genetic differentiation. The genetic basis of many life-history traits, and their evolution according to different environmental conditions remain however poorly understood. METHODS: We conducted an association study on the Glanville fritillary butterfly, using material from five populations along a latitudinal gradient within the Baltic Sea region, which show different degrees of habitat fragmentation. We investigated variation in 10 principal components, cofounding in total 21 life-history traits, according to two environmental types, and 33 genetic SNP markers from 15 candidate genes. RESULTS: We found that nine SNPs from five genes showed strong trend for trait associations (p-values under 0.001 before correction). These associations, yet non-significant after multiple test corrections, with a total number of 1,086 tests, were consistent across the study populations. Additionally, these nine genes also showed an allele frequency difference between the populations from the northern fragmented versus the southern continuous landscape. DISCUSSION: Our study provides further support for previously described trait associations within the Glanville fritillary butterfly species across different spatial scales. Although our results alone are inconclusive, they are concordant with previous studies that identified these associations to be related to climatic changes or habitat fragmentation within the Åland population.

10.
Sci Rep ; 7: 45651, 2017 03 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28361981

ABSTRACT

The composition of human microbiota is affected by a multitude of factors. Understanding the dynamics of our microbial communities is important for promoting human health because microbiota has a crucial role in the development of inflammatory diseases, such as allergies. We have studied the skin microbiota of both arms in 275 Finnish children of few months old to teenagers living in contrasting environments. We show that while age is a major factor affecting skin microbial composition, the living environment also discriminates the skin microbiota of rural and urban children. The effect of environment is age-specific; it is most prominent in toddlers but weaker for newborns and non-existent for teenagers. Within-individual variation is also related to age and environment. Surprisingly, variation between arms is smaller in rural subjects in all age groups, except in teenagers. We also collected serum samples from children for characterization of allergic sensitization and found a weak, but significant association between allergic sensitization and microbial composition. We suggest that physiological and behavioral changes, related to age and the amount of contact with environmental microbiota, jointly influence the dynamics of the skin microbiota, and explain why the association between the living environment skin microbiota is lost in teenager.


Subject(s)
Environmental Microbiology , Microbiota , Skin/microbiology , Adolescent , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Finland , Humans , Infant , Male , Rural Population , Urban Population
11.
Nat Commun ; 8: 14504, 2017 02 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28211463

ABSTRACT

Ecologists are challenged to construct models of the biological consequences of habitat loss and fragmentation. Here, we use a metapopulation model to predict the distribution of the Glanville fritillary butterfly during 22 years across a large heterogeneous landscape with 4,415 small dry meadows. The majority (74%) of the 125 networks into which the meadows were clustered are below the extinction threshold for long-term persistence. Among the 33 networks above the threshold, spatial configuration and habitat quality rather than the pooled habitat area predict metapopulation size and persistence, but additionally allelic variation in a SNP in the gene Phosphoglucose isomerase (Pgi) explains 30% of variation in metapopulation size. The Pgi genotypes are associated with dispersal rate and hence with colonizations and extinctions. Associations between Pgi genotypes, population turnover and metapopulation size reflect eco-evolutionary dynamics, which may be a common feature in species inhabiting patch networks with unstable local dynamics.


Subject(s)
Butterflies/genetics , Ecosystem , Fritillaria/physiology , Alleles , Animals , Extinction, Biological , Gene Frequency , Genotype , Logistic Models , Population Dynamics , Probability
12.
J Exp Biol ; 219(Pt 10): 1488-94, 2016 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26944488

ABSTRACT

Flying insects have the highest known mass-specific demand for oxygen, which makes it likely that reduced availability of oxygen might limit sustained flight, either instead of or in addition to the limitation due to metabolite resources. The Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) occurs as a large metapopulation in which adult butterflies frequently disperse between small local populations. Here, we examine how the interaction between oxygen availability and fuel use affects flight performance in the Glanville fritillary. Individuals were flown under either normoxic (21 kPa O2) or hypoxic (10 kPa O2) conditions and their flight metabolism was measured. To determine resource use, levels of circulating glucose, trehalose and whole-body triglyceride were recorded after flight. Flight performance was significantly reduced in hypoxic conditions. When flown under normoxic conditions, we observed a positive correlation among individuals between post-flight circulating trehalose levels and flight metabolic rate, suggesting that low levels of circulating trehalose constrains flight metabolism. To test this hypothesis experimentally, we measured the flight metabolic rate of individuals injected with a trehalase inhibitor. In support of the hypothesis, experimental butterflies showed significantly reduced flight metabolic rate, but not resting metabolic rate, in comparison to control individuals. By contrast, under hypoxia there was no relationship between trehalose and flight metabolic rate. Additionally, in this case, flight metabolic rate was reduced in spite of circulating trehalose levels that were high enough to support high flight metabolic rate under normoxic conditions. These results demonstrate a significant interaction between oxygen and energy availability for the control of flight performance.


Subject(s)
Butterflies/physiology , Energy Metabolism , Flight, Animal/physiology , Fritillaria/parasitology , Oxygen/metabolism , Animals , Basal Metabolism/drug effects , Basal Metabolism/physiology , Butterflies/drug effects , Energy Metabolism/drug effects , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Female , Flight, Animal/drug effects , Glucose/analysis , Hypoxia/metabolism , Male , Regression Analysis , Rest , Starvation/metabolism , Trehalase/antagonists & inhibitors , Trehalase/metabolism , Trehalose/analysis
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(10): 2678-83, 2016 03 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26903642

ABSTRACT

Describing the evolutionary dynamics of now extinct populations is challenging, as their genetic composition before extinction is generally unknown. The Glanville fritillary butterfly has a large extant metapopulation in the Åland Islands in Finland, but declined to extinction in the nearby fragmented southwestern (SW) Finnish archipelago in the 20th century. We genotyped museum samples for 222 SNPs across the genome, including SNPs from candidate genes and neutral regions. SW Finnish populations had significantly reduced genetic diversity before extinction, and their allele frequencies gradually diverged from those in contemporary Åland populations over 80 y. We identified 15 outlier loci among candidate SNPs, mostly related to flight, in which allele frequencies have changed more than the neutral expectation. At outlier loci, allele frequencies in SW Finland shifted in the same direction as newly established populations deviated from old local populations in contemporary Åland. Moreover, outlier allele frequencies in SW Finland resemble those in fragmented landscapes as opposed to continuous landscapes in the Baltic region. These results indicate selection for genotypes associated with good colonization capacity in the highly fragmented landscape before the extinction of the populations. Evolutionary response to habitat fragmentation may have enhanced the viability of the populations, but it did not save the species from regional extinction in the face of severe habitat loss and fragmentation. These results highlight a potentially common situation in changing environments: evolutionary changes are not strong enough to fully compensate for the direct adverse effects of environmental change and thereby rescue populations from extinction.


Subject(s)
Butterflies/genetics , Ecosystem , Extinction, Biological , Genome, Insect/genetics , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Animals , Evolution, Molecular , Finland , Flight, Animal , Gene Frequency , Genes, Insect/genetics , Genetic Variation , Genotype , Geography , Islands , Selection, Genetic
14.
J Anim Ecol ; 85(3): 638-47, 2016 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26781758

ABSTRACT

Stable coexistence of ecologically identical species is not possible according to the established ecological theory. Many coexistence mechanisms have been proposed, but they all involve some form of ecological differentiation among the competing species. The aggregation model of coexistence would predict coexistence of identical species if there would be a mechanism that generates spatially aggregated distributions that are not completely correlated among the species. Our aim is to demonstrate that continued dispersal, triggered by reproductive interference between ecologically identical species, is such a mechanism. This study has been motivated by species using ephemeral patchy resources, such as decomposing fruits, fungal sporophores, carrion, and dung. We analyse an individual-based model with sexual reproduction, in which the progeny develops in ephemeral resource patches and the new generation disperses to a new set of patches. We assume spatially restricted dispersal, that patches differ in detectability, and that unmated females continue dispersal. In the model, reproductive interference (males spend some time searching for and/or attempting to mate with heterospecific females) reduces the mating rate of females, especially in the less common species, which leads to increased dispersal and reduces spatial correlation in species' distributions. For a wide range of parameter values, coexisting species show a systematic difference in their relative abundances due to two opposing forces: (1) uncommon species have reduced growth rate (Allee effect), which decreases abundance; (2) an abundance difference between the species reduces interspecific spatial correlation, which in turn reduces interspecific competition and allows the rarer species to persist at low density. Our results demonstrate a new mechanism for coexistence that is not based on ecological differentiation between species.


Subject(s)
Ecosystem , Models, Biological , Sexual Behavior, Animal/physiology , Animals , Female , Male , Population Dynamics , Reproduction/physiology , Spatial Behavior
15.
J Insect Physiol ; 85: 23-31, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26658138

ABSTRACT

Flight is essential for foraging, mate searching and dispersal in many insects, but flight metabolism in ectotherms is strongly constrained by temperature. Thermal conditions vary greatly in natural populations and may hence restrict fitness-related activities. Working on the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia), we studied the effects of temperature experienced during the first 2 days of adult life on flight metabolism, genetic associations between flight metabolic rate and variation in candidate metabolic genes, and genotype-temperature interactions. The maximal flight performance was reduced by 17% by 2 days of low ambient temperature (15 °C) prior to the flight trial, mimicking conditions that butterflies commonly encounter in nature. A SNP in phosphoglucose isomerase (Pgi) had a significant association on flight metabolic rate in males and a SNP in triosephosphate isomerase (Tpi) was significantly associated with flight metabolic rate in females. In the Pgi SNP, AC heterozygotes had higher flight metabolic rate than AA homozygotes following low preceding temperature, but the trend was reversed following high preceding temperature, consistent with previous results on genotype-temperature interaction for this SNP. We suggest that these results on 2-day old butterflies reflect thermal effect on the maturation of flight muscles. These results highlight the consequences of variation in thermal conditions on the time scale of days, and they contribute to a better understanding of the complex dynamics of flight metabolism and flight-related activities under conditions that are relevant for natural populations living under variable thermal conditions.


Subject(s)
Butterflies/physiology , Flight, Animal , Insect Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Butterflies/genetics , Female , Genotype , Insect Proteins/genetics , Male , Temperature
16.
Mol Ecol ; 24(19): 4886-900, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26331775

ABSTRACT

Insect flight is one of the most energetically demanding activities in the animal kingdom, yet for many insects flight is necessary for reproduction and foraging. Moreover, dispersal by flight is essential for the viability of species living in fragmented landscapes. Here, working on the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia), we use transcriptome sequencing to investigate gene expression changes caused by 15 min of flight in two contrasting populations and the two sexes. Male butterflies and individuals from a large metapopulation had significantly higher peak flight metabolic rate (FMR) than female butterflies and those from a small inbred population. In the pooled data, FMR was significantly positively correlated with genome-wide heterozygosity, a surrogate of individual inbreeding. The flight experiment changed the expression level of 1513 genes, including genes related to major energy metabolism pathways, ribosome biogenesis and RNA processing, and stress and immune responses. Males and butterflies from the population with high FMR had higher basal expression of genes related to energy metabolism, whereas females and butterflies from the small population with low FMR had higher expression of genes related to ribosome/RNA processing and immune response. Following the flight treatment, genes related to energy metabolism were generally down-regulated, while genes related to ribosome/RNA processing and immune response were up-regulated. These results suggest that common molecular mechanisms respond to flight and can influence differences in flight metabolic capacity between populations and sexes.


Subject(s)
Butterflies/genetics , Flight, Animal , Gene Expression , Sex Characteristics , Transcriptome , Animals , Butterflies/physiology , Energy Metabolism/genetics , Female , Finland , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Sequence Analysis, RNA
17.
PLoS One ; 10(8): e0134843, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26244782

ABSTRACT

The maternally transmitted bacterium Wolbachia pipientis is well known for spreading and persisting in insect populations through manipulation of the fitness of its host. Here, we identify three new Wolbachia pipientis strains, wHho, wHho2 and wHho3, infecting Hyposoter horticola, a specialist wasp parasitoid of the Glanville fritillary butterfly. The wHho strain (ST435) infects about 50% of the individuals in the Åland islands in Finland, with a different infection rate in the two mitochondrial (COI) haplotypes of the wasp. The vertical transmission rate of Wolbachia is imperfect, and lower in the haplotype with lower infection rate, suggesting a fitness trade-off. We found no association of the wHho infection with fecundity, longevity or dispersal ability of the parasitoid host. However, preliminary results convey spatial associations between Wolbachia infection, host mitochondrial haplotype and parasitism of H. horticola by its hyperparasitoid, Mesochorus cf. stigmaticus. We discuss the possibility that Wolbachia infection protects H. horticola against hyperparasitism.


Subject(s)
Electron Transport Complex IV/genetics , Insect Proteins/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Wasps/genetics , Wolbachia/genetics , Animals , Female , Fertility/genetics , Finland , Genetic Variation , Geography , Haplotypes , Host-Pathogen Interactions/genetics , Longevity/genetics , Male , Phylogeny , Species Specificity , Wasps/classification , Wasps/microbiology , Wolbachia/classification , Wolbachia/physiology
18.
PLoS One ; 10(7): e0132126, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26200351

ABSTRACT

In biodiversity conservation, habitat corridors are assumed to increase landscape-level connectivity and to enhance the viability of otherwise isolated populations. While the role of corridors is supported by empirical evidence, studies have typically been conducted at small spatial scales. Here, we assess the quality and the functionality of a large 95-km long forest corridor connecting two large national parks (416 and 311 km2) in the southeastern escarpment of Madagascar. We analyze the occurrence of 300 species in 5 taxonomic groups in the parks and in the corridor, and combine high-resolution forest cover data with a simulation model to examine various scenarios of corridor destruction. At present, the corridor contains essentially the same communities as the national parks, reflecting its breadth which on average matches that of the parks. In the simulation model, we consider three types of dispersers: passive dispersers, which settle randomly around the source population; active dispersers, which settle only in favorable habitat; and gap-avoiding active dispersers, which avoid dispersing across non-habitat. Our results suggest that long-distance passive dispersers are most sensitive to ongoing degradation of the corridor, because increasing numbers of propagules are lost outside the forest habitat. For a wide range of dispersal parameters, the national parks are large enough to sustain stable populations until the corridor becomes severely broken, which will happen around 2065 if the current rate of forest loss continues. A significant decrease in gene flow along the corridor is expected after 2040, and this will exacerbate the adverse consequences of isolation. Our results demonstrate that simulation studies assessing the role of habitat corridors should pay close attention to the mode of dispersal and the effects of regional stochasticity.


Subject(s)
Conservation of Natural Resources/methods , Biodiversity , Ecosystem , Forests , Gene Flow , Madagascar , Models, Theoretical , Population Dynamics
19.
Proc Biol Sci ; 282(1806): 20150173, 2015 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25854888

ABSTRACT

Climate change is known to shift species' geographical ranges, phenologies and abundances, but less is known about other population dynamic consequences. Here, we analyse spatio-temporal dynamics of the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) in a network of 4000 dry meadows during 21 years. The results demonstrate two strong, related patterns: the amplitude of year-to-year fluctuations in the size of the metapopulation as a whole has increased, though there is no long-term trend in average abundance; and there is a highly significant increase in the level of spatial synchrony in population dynamics. The increased synchrony cannot be explained by increasing within-year spatial correlation in precipitation, the key environmental driver of population change, or in per capita growth rate. On the other hand, the frequency of drought during a critical life-history stage (early larval instars) has increased over the years, which is sufficient to explain the increasing amplitude and the expanding spatial synchrony in metapopulation dynamics. Increased spatial synchrony has the general effect of reducing long-term metapopulation viability even if there is no change in average metapopulation size. This study demonstrates how temporal changes in weather conditions can lead to striking changes in spatio-temporal population dynamics.


Subject(s)
Butterflies/physiology , Climate Change , Rain , Animals , Butterflies/growth & development , Finland , Larva/growth & development , Larva/physiology , Population Dynamics , Seasons
20.
Ann Med ; 47(3): 218-25, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25904094

ABSTRACT

Urban living in built environments, combined with the use of processed water and food, may not provide the microbial stimulation necessary for a balanced development of immune function. Many chronic inflammatory disorders, including allergic, autoimmune, metabolic, and even some behavioural disorders, are linked to alteration in the human commensal microbiota. Sedentary lifestyle is associated with reduced exposure to a broad spectrum of environmental micro-organisms and surplus energy balance, both risk factors of chronic inflammatory disorders. According to the Biodiversity Hypothesis, an environment with diverse macrobiota and microbiota modifies and enriches the human microbiota, which in turn is crucial in the development and maintenance of appropriate immune function. These issues were discussed in the symposium 'Chronic Inflammation, Lifestyle and Environment', held in Helsinki, 20-22 August 2014, under the sponsorship of the Yrjö Jahnsson Foundation. This paper briefly outlines the recent findings in the context of the environment, lifestyle, and health; discusses the forces that undermine immune tolerance in urban environments; and highlights the possibilities to restore broken immune tolerance among urban dwellers, summarizing the main messages in four statements and calling for actions to combat major public health threats.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Inflammation/etiology , Microbiota/immunology , Adaptive Immunity/immunology , Chronic Disease , Diet, Western , Environment , Humans , Inflammation/immunology , Inflammation/microbiology , Sedentary Behavior , Urbanization
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...