Jouni Taskinen
University of Jyväskylä
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Featured researches published by Jouni Taskinen.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences | 2000
Markus J. Rantala; Jani Koskimäki; Jouni Taskinen; Katja Tynkkynen; Jukka Suhonen
Calopteryx splendens males exhibit a remarkable variation in wing pigmentation both within and between populations. In this study, we examined whether the wingspots of male C.splendens are related to male quality. We measured the nylon implant encapsulation rate for 85 males and found that males with larger wingspots had a faster encapsulation rate, indicating a better immunocompetence. We also found that the encapsulation rate was positively correlated with the density of haemocytes in the haemolymph. Another measurement of male quality, fluctuating asymmetry of wingspots, correlated negatively with the size of the wingspots. Males with asymmetrical wingspots also had lower encapsulation rates than more symmetrical males. Our results suggest that the size of wingspot is an indicator of male quality in C.splendens.
Biological Reviews | 2017
Manuel Lopes-Lima; Ronaldo Sousa; Juergen Geist; David C. Aldridge; Rafael Araujo; Jakob Bergengren; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Erika Bódis; Lyubov E. Burlakova; Dirk Van Damme; Karel Douda; Elsa Froufe; Dilian Georgiev; Clemens Gumpinger; Alexander Y. Karatayev; Ümit Kebapçi; Ian Killeen; Jasna Lajtner; Bjørn M. Larsen; Rosaria Lauceri; Anastasios Legakis; Sabela Lois; Stefan Lundberg; Evelyn Moorkens; Gregory Motte; Karl-Otto Nagel; Paz Ondina; Adolfo Outeiro; Momir Paunović; Vincent Prié
Freshwater mussels of the Order Unionida provide important ecosystem functions and services, yet many of their populations are in decline. We comprehensively review the status of the 16 currently recognized species in Europe, collating for the first time their life‐history traits, distribution, conservation status, habitat preferences, and main threats in order to suggest future management actions. In northern, central, and eastern Europe, a relatively homogeneous species composition is found in most basins. In southern Europe, despite the lower species richness, spatially restricted species make these basins a high conservation priority. Information on freshwater mussels in Europe is unevenly distributed with considerable differences in data quality and quantity among countries and species. To make conservation more effective in the future, we suggest greater international cooperation using standardized protocols and methods to monitor and manage European freshwater mussel diversity. Such an approach will not only help conserve this vulnerable group but also, through the protection of these important organisms, will offer wider benefits to freshwater ecosystems.
Systematic Parasitology | 1991
Jouni Taskinen; E. Tellervo Valtonen; David I. Gibson
Two types of bucephalid cercariae are reported from the bivalve Anodonta anatina in two Finnish lakes. One, Type A, resembles in gross morphology the cercaria of Bucephalus polymorphus, and the other, Type B, resembles the cercaria of Rhipidocotyle campanula. Type A daughter-sporocysts develop more slowly, have a greater cercarial productivity and exhibit a differential diurnal rhythm to that of Type B. Cercariae of Type A have a shorter longevity than Type B and tend to encyst in the fins rather than the gill-arches of fish intermediate hosts. The main definitive host of Type A is pike Esox lucius and, in the case of Type B, perch Perca fluviatilis. Adults of Types A and B are morphologically very similar and both species belong to the genus Rhipidocotyle.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2009
Jukka Kekäläinen; J. Albert Vallunen; Craig R. Primmer; Jouni Rättyä; Jouni Taskinen
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) contains the most variable genes in vertebrates, but despite extensive research, the mechanisms maintaining this polymorphism are still unresolved. One hypothesis is that MHC polymorphism is a result of balancing selection operating by overdominance, but convincing evidence for overdominant selection in natural populations has been lacking. We present strong evidence consistent with MHC-specific overdominance in a free-living population of Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus) in northernmost Europe. In this population, where just two MHC alleles were observed, MHC heterozygous fish had a lower parasite load, were in better condition (as estimated by a fatness indicator) and had higher survival under stress than either of the homozygotes. Conversely, there was no consistent association between these fitness measures and assumedly neutral microsatellite variability, indicating an MHC-specific effect. Our results provide convincing empirical evidence consistent with the notion that overdominance can be an important evolutionary mechanism contributing to MHC polymorphism in wild animal populations. They also support a recent simulation study indicating that the number of alleles expected to be maintained at an MHC loci can be low, even under strong heterozygote advantage.
International Journal for Parasitology | 1994
Jouni Taskinen; E. T. Valtonen; T. Mäkelä
The prevalence of Rhipidocotyle campanula in Lake Kuivasjärvi, northern Finland, was 5.7% (n = 1486) during 1989. The prevalences of R. campanula and R. fennica in Lake Saravesi, central Finland, during 1987 to 1989 were 1.0 and 33.2% (n = 1157), respectively. No clear seasonality in prevalence was found in either species, although miracidia of these digeneans are present only in late summer and autumn. The proportion of infected clams in which the gonad was full of sporocyst tubules was on average 90% for R. campanula and 30% for R. fennica. Clams with only few sporocyst tubules in their gonad were observed most frequently in spring. Old; empty sporocyst ribbons of R. fennica first appeared in the clams during August after the beginning of the cercarial emergence and disappeared slowly thereafter. However, in both species viable sporocyst ribbons with early developmental stages of cercariae were found throughout the year. The emergence of R. fennica cercariae began during July and continued throughout September in Lake Saravesi. The duration of cercariae emergence was found to be up to 72 days in the laboratory. R. campanula cerariae in the northern Lake Kuivasjärvi emerged from mid-June until mid-August.
Systematic Parasitology | 1992
David I. Gibson; Jouni Taskinen; E. Tellervo Valtonen
Rhipidocotyle fennica n. sp. (= Rhipidocotyle Type A of Taskinen et al., 1991) from the intestine of Esox lucius in central Finland is described and compared by means of a principal components analysis (PCA) with R. campanula (= Rhipidocotyle Type B of Taskinen et al., 1991). Its cercaria develops in the bivalve Anodonta anatina and the metacercaria occurs in the skin and fins of Rutilus rutilus. The metacercaria is discriminated from that of R. campanula by PCA and is described along with aspects of the chaetotaxy of the cercaria. The new species is distinguished from R. campanula, R. kovalae, R. papillosa and R. septpapillata.
Parasites & Vectors | 2010
V. N. Mikheev; A. F. Pasternak; Jouni Taskinen; E. T. Valtonen
BackgroundSuccess of trophically transmitted parasites depends to a great extent on their ability to manipulate their intermediate hosts in a way that makes them easier prey for target hosts. Parasite-induced behavioural changes are the most spectacular and diverse examples of manipulation. Most of the studies have been focused on individual behaviour of hosts including fish. We suggest that agonistic interactions and territoriality in fish hosts may affect their vulnerability to predators and thus the transmission efficiency of trophically transmitted parasites. The parasite Diplostomum spathaceum (Trematoda) and juvenile rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, were used to study whether infection can alter aggression rates and territorial behaviour of intermediate fish hosts.ResultsThe changes in behaviour of rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss, infected with an eye fluke Diplostomum spathaceum (Trematoda), was monitored over the course of an experimental infection for 1.5 months. At the beginning of their development, not yet infective D. spathaceum metacercariae decreased the aggressiveness of rainbow trout. By the time that metacercariae were fully infective to their definitive hosts, the aggressiveness increased and exceeded that of control fish. Despite the increased aggressiveness, the experimentally infected fish lost contests for a territory (dark parts of the bottom) against the control fish.ConclusionsThe results obtained indicate that the parasitized fish pay the cost of aggressiveness without the benefit of acquiring a territory that would provide them with better protection against predators. This behaviour should increase transmission of the parasite as expected by the parasite manipulation hypothesis.
Evolution | 2004
Mikael Puurtinen; Mirjami Hytönen; K. Emily Knott; Jouni Taskinen; Kari Nissinen; Veijo Kaitala
Abstract The amount and distribution of genetic variability in host populations can have significant effects on the outcome of host‐parasite interactions. We studied the effect of mating system and genetic variability on susceptibility of Lymnaea stagnalis snails to trematode parasites. Mating system of snails from eight populations differing in the amount of genetic variability was manipulated, and self‐ and cross‐fertilized offspring were exposed to naturally occurring trematode parasites in a controlled lake experiment. Susceptibility of snails varied between populations, but mating‐system treatment did not have a significant effect. Heterozygosity of snails was negatively correlated with the probability of trematode infection, however, suggesting that parasitic diseases may pose a serious threat to populations lacking genetic variability.
Chemosphere | 1994
Jukka Pellinen; Minna Ruokolainen; Petteri Mäkelä; Jouni Taskinen
Abstract The extractable organic halogen (EOX) residue of duck mussels, Anodonta anatina , from the unpolluted Lake Hoytiainen, Finland, was found to be 690 μg/g of lipids. The residue was characterized by analyzing chlorinated phenols, hydrocarbons and fatty acids. These compound classes accounted only for 1.9% of the EOX. Mussels from the same lake were incubated in a lake receiving pulp and paper mill effluents for 12 months to study the bioaccumulation of organochlorine compounds. The EOX of these mussels was 2045 μg/g lipids and only 1.1% of the residue was explained by the low molecular weight compounds. Thus, the majority of EOX remains undefined. However, potential differences in composition are suggested by the relative proportion of defined compounds and the differences among the measured compound classes. These halogen compounds may be of natural origin or reaction products of anthropogenic compounds with humic substances. The presence of such compounds should be taken into account when evaluating the accumulation of pulp mill effluent-related EOX in mussels. No difference was found in the EOX between male and female mussles caged close to a pulp mill, but, on dry weight basis, mussels infected by a digenean parasite had higher EOX concentration than healthy females.
Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2004
Raine Kortet; Anssi Vainikka; Markus J. Rantala; Janne Myntti; Jouni Taskinen
According to the ‘good genes’ hypothesis, sexual ornaments provide an indication of the ‘quality’ of the bearer. In roach, Rutilus rutilus, breeding tubercles (BTs) may signal resistance against the digenean parasite, Rhipidocotyle campanula. Life history theory predicts that there should be a trade‐off between parasite resistance and other life history traits. In roach, this could imply a trade‐off between parasite resistance in mature fish and some larval feature. We studied embryo survival and the early viability of larvae of male roach in relation to expression of BTs and parasite resistance in maternal half‐sibling families. Highly ornamented males had higher resistance against R. campanula than less ornamented males, but the BTs were not related to either embryo survival or larval viability. However, sires having higher resistance to R. campanula had lower larval viability. These results suggest that BTs of male roach do not indicate ‘quality’ in terms of early survival or viability, but rather in terms of adult parasite resistance.