Antti Lammi
University of Jyväskylä
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Featured researches published by Antti Lammi.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 1999
Kaija Virolainen; Teija Virola; Jukka Suhonen; Markku Kuitunen; Antti Lammi; Pirkko Siikamäki
Data on vascular plants of boreal lakes in Finland were used to compare the efficiency of reserve selection methods in representing four aspects of biodiversity over a 63 year period. These aspects included species richness, phylogenetic diversity, restricted range diversity and threatened species. Our results show that the efficiency of reserve selection methods depends on the selection criteria used and on the aspect of biodiversity under consideration. Heuristic methods and optimizing algorithms were nearly equally efficient in selecting lake networks over a small geographical range. In addition, a scoring procedure was observed to be efficient in maintaining different aspects of biodiversity over time. However, the random selection of lakes seems to be the most inefficient option for a reserve network. In general, reserve selection methods seem to favour lakes that maximize one aspect of diversity at the time of selection, but the network may not be the best option for maintaining the maximum diversity over time. The reserve selection methods do affect the long-term outcome but it is impossible to recommend one method over the others unequivocally.
Oecologia | 1995
Antti Lammi; Markku Kuitunen
Floral deception, which mainly appears in highly evolved families such as Orchidaceae, was studied in Central Finland. In nectarless Dactylorhiza incarnata, the deceptive pollination system has been considered to function best in remote habitats such as marshes, where flowering plants attractive to pollinators are rare (remote habitats hypothesis). In contrast, the magnet-species theory predicts that a nectarless plant benefits from growing in the vicinity of nectarcontaining species. We tested these hypotheses by adding attractive, nectar-containg violets (Viola x wittrockiana) to orchid populations. The percentage of fruit set in D. incarnata was adversely affected by the violets, probably because interspecific exploitation competition for pollinators took place in favour of the violas at the expense of the orchids. This result gave no support for the magnet-species theory and supported the remote habitats hypothesis.
Evolutionary Ecology | 2002
Pirkko Siikamäki; Antti Lammi; Kaisa Mustajärvi
Several earlier studies have indicated a negative relationship between fluctuating asymmetry (FA) and fitness. We tested this assumption by investigating the association between petal asymmetry and several fitness-related characters among natural and common garden populations of Lychnis viscaria. Neither seed set, germination percentage nor the growth rate of seedlings were related to the level of flower asymmetry either among natural populations or in common garden conditions. The only significant association found was a positive connection between petal asymmetry and seed mass measured from natural populations. Thus, in contrary to many earlier published reports, we did not find any evidence for a negative relationship between FA and fitness even if we controlled for measurement error, we had adequate sample size and we measured these characters in two environments. This suggests that FA is not consistently related to individual quality and fitness.
Ecoscience | 2001
Veikko Salonen; Antti Lammi
Abstract We conducted two pot experiments to examine the relationship between hemiparasitic plant (Rhinanthus serotinus, Scrophulariaceae) infection and host (Linum usitatissimum, Linaceae and Brassica rapa ssp. oleifera, Brassicaceae) performance. We were especially interested in the effects of hemiparasitism on the size and shape asymmetry of host flowers, since neither subject has been studied before. We also conducted a field experiment to examine the effects of shape asymmetry of B. rapa ssp. oleifera flowers on pollination success. The shape of flowers produced by both L. usitatissimum and B. rapa ssp. oleifera plants grown without parasites was less asymmetric, and for both host species, the flowers of plants grown without parasites had significantly longer petals than flowers produced by hosts with parasites. Significantly more bumblebees visited the inflorescences of B. rapa with untreated flowers compared to inflorescences with highly asymmetrical flowers (two of the four petals clipped shorter), whereas no difference was found in the number of visits made by syrphid flies. Parasitism significantly reduced host biomass and reproduction in both host species.
Conservation Biology | 1999
Antti Lammi; Pirkko Siikamäki; Kaisa Mustajärvi
Journal of Ecology | 2001
Kaisa Mustajärvi; Pirkko Siikamäki; Saara Rytkönen; Antti Lammi
Evolution | 1998
Pirkko Siikamäki; Antti Lammi
Conservation Biology | 2000
Anna-Kaija Eisto; Markku Kuitunen; Antti Lammi; Veli Saari; Jukka Suhonen; Susanna Syrjasuo; Päivi M. Tikka
Freshwater Biology | 2001
Teija Virola; Veijo Kaitala; Antti Lammi; Pirkko Siikamäki; Jukka Suhonen
Ecography | 1999
Teija Virola; Veijo Kaitala; Markku Kuitunen; Antti Lammi; Pirkko Siikamäki; Jukka Suhoncen; Kaija Virolainen