Harri Vehviläinen
University of Turku
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Featured researches published by Harri Vehviläinen.
Oecologia | 2007
Harri Vehviläinen; Julia Koricheva; Kai Ruohomäki
Plant monocultures are commonly believed to be more susceptible to herbivore attacks than stands composed of several plant species. However, few studies have experimentally tested the effects of tree species diversity on herbivory. In this paper, we present a meta-analysis of uniformly collected data on insect herbivore abundance and damage on three tree species (silver birch, black alder and sessile oak) from seven long-term forest diversity experiments in boreal and temperate forest zones. Our aim was to compare the effects of forest diversity on herbivores belonging to different feeding guilds and inhabiting different tree species. At the same time we also examined the variation in herbivore responses due to tree age and sampling period within the season, the effects of experimental design (plot size and planting density) and the stability of herbivore responses over time. Herbivore responses varied significantly both among insect feeding guilds and among host tree species. Among insect feeding guilds, only leaf miner densities were consistently lower and less variable in mixed stands as compared to tree monocultures regardless of the host tree species. The responses of other herbivores to forest diversity depended largely on host tree species. Insect herbivory on birch was significantly lower in mixtures than in birch monocultures, whereas insect herbivory on oak and alder was higher in mixtures than in oak and alder monocultures. The effects of tree species diversity were also more pronounced in older trees, in the earlier part of the season, at larger plots and at lower planting density. Overall our results demonstrate that forest diversity does not generally and uniformly reduce insect herbivory and suggest instead that insect herbivore responses to forest diversity are highly variable and strongly dependent on the host tree species and other stand characteristics as well as on the type of the herbivore.
Oecologia | 2005
Janne Riihimäki; Pekka Kaitaniemi; Julia Koricheva; Harri Vehviläinen
Numerous studies conducted in agro-ecosystems support the enemies hypothesis, which states that predators and parasites are more efficient in controlling pest densities in polycultures than in monocultures. Few similar studies, however, have been conducted in forest ecosystems, and we do not yet have evidence as to whether the enemies hypothesis holds true in forests. In a 2-year study, we investigated whether the survival of autumnal moth (Epirrita autumnata) larvae and pupae differs between silver birch monocultures and two-species mixtures of birch with black alder, Norway spruce and Scots pine. We placed young larvae on birch saplings and monitored their survival until the end of the larval period, when we checked whether they had been parasitized. After the larvae had pupated, pupal survival was tested in a field trial. In 2002, the larvae disappeared earlier and their overall survival was lower in birch–pine mixtures than in other stand types. In 2003, survival probability was lowest in birch–pine stands only during the first week and there were no differences between stands in overall survival. Larval parasitism was not affected by tree species composition. Pupal weight and pupal survival were likewise not affected by stand type. Among the predators, wood ants were more abundant on birches growing in birch–pine mixtures than in other stand types probably because colonies of myrmecophilic aphids were common on pines. In contrast, spider numbers did not differ between stand types. Ant exclusion by means of a glue ring around the birch trunk increased larval survival, indicating that ants are important predators of the autumnal moth larvae; differences in larval survival between stands are probably due to differential ant predation. Our results provide only partial support for the enemies hypothesis, and suggest that it is both tree species composition and species diversity which affect herbivore survival and predation.
Ecological Entomology | 2004
Pekka Kaitaniemi; Harri Vehviläinen; Kai Ruohomäki
Abstract. 1. Changes in herbivore movement and feeding behaviour may determine the efficacy of induced plant resistance by affecting the location of damage within the foliage and by modifying the vulnerability of herbivores to predators.
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2006
Julia Koricheva; Harri Vehviläinen; Janne Riihimäki; Kai Ruohomäki; Pekka Kaitaniemi; Hanna Ranta
Ecography | 2006
Harri Vehviläinen; Julia Koricheva
Oikos | 2008
Harri Vehviläinen; Julia Koricheva; Kai Ruohomäki
Ecological Entomology | 2006
Janne Riihimäki; Harri Vehviläinen; Pekka Kaitaniemi; Julia Koricheva
Basic and Applied Ecology | 2006
Harri Vehviläinen; Julia Koricheva; Kai Ruohomäki; Tord Johansson; Sauli Valkonen
Silva Fennica | 2007
Pekka Kaitaniemi; Janne Riihimäki; Julia Koricheva; Harri Vehviläinen
Oikos | 2015
Kasey E. Barton; Elena Valkama; Harri Vehviläinen; Kai Ruohomäki; Tiffany M. Knight; Julia Koricheva