Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Karin H. Olsson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Karin H. Olsson.


Annual Review of Marine Science | 2016

Characteristic Sizes of Life in the Oceans, from Bacteria to Whales

Ken Haste Andersen; T. Berge; Rodrigo J. Gonçalves; Martin Hartvig; Jan Heuschele; Samuel Hylander; Nis Sand Jacobsen; Christian Lindemann; Erik Andreas Martens; Anna Neuheimer; Karin H. Olsson; A. Palacz; A. E. F. Prowe; Julie Sainmont; S. J. Traving; André W. Visser; Navish Wadhwa; Thomas Kiørboe

The size of an individual organism is a key trait to characterize its physiology and feeding ecology. Size-based scaling laws may have a limited size range of validity or undergo a transition from one scaling exponent to another at some characteristic size. We collate and review data on size-based scaling laws for resource acquisition, mobility, sensory range, and progeny size for all pelagic marine life, from bacteria to whales. Further, we review and develop simple theoretical arguments for observed scaling laws and the characteristic sizes of a change or breakdown of power laws. We divide life in the ocean into seven major realms based on trophic strategy, physiology, and life history strategy. Such a categorization represents a move away from a taxonomically oriented description toward a trait-based description of life in the oceans. Finally, we discuss life forms that transgress the simple size-based rules and identify unanswered questions.


Ecology | 2015

Adult and offspring size in the ocean over 17 orders of magnitude follows two life history strategies

Anna Neuheimer; Martin Hartvig; Jan Heuschele; Samuel Hylander; Thomas Kiørboe; Karin H. Olsson; Julie Sainmont; Ken Haste Andersen

Explaining variability in offspring vs. adult size among groups is a necessary step to determine the evolutionary and environmental constraints shaping variability in life history strategies. This is of particular interest for life in the ocean where a diversity of offspring development strategies is observed along with variability in physical and biological forcing factors in space and time. We compiled adult and offspring size for 407 pelagic marine species covering more than 17 orders of magnitude in body mass including Cephalopoda, Cnidaria, Crustaceans, Ctenophora, Elasmobranchii, Mammalia, Sagittoidea, and Teleost. We find marine life following one of two distinct strategies, with offspring size being either proportional to adult size (e.g., Crustaceans, Elasmobranchii, and Mammalia) or invariant with adult size (e.g., Cephalopoda, Cnidaria, Sagittoidea, Teleosts, and possibly Ctenophora). We discuss where these two strategies occur and how these patterns (along with the relative size of the offspring) may be shaped by physical and biological constraints in the organisms environment. This adaptive environment along with the evolutionary history of the different groups shape observed life history strategies and possible group-specific responses to changing environmental conditions (e.g., production and distribution).


PLOS ONE | 2017

Dark eyes in female sand gobies indicate readiness to spawn

Karin H. Olsson; Sandra Johansson; Eva-Lotta Blom; Kai Lindström; Ola Svensson; Helen Nilsson Sköld; Charlotta Kvarnemo

In animals, colorful and conspicuous ornaments enhance individual attractiveness to potential mates, but are typically tempered by natural selection for crypsis and predator protection. In species where males compete for females, this can lead to highly ornamented males competing for mating opportunities with choosy females, and vice versa. However, even where males compete for mating opportunities, females may exhibit conspicuous displays. These female displays are often poorly understood and it may be unclear whether they declare mating intent, signal intrasexual aggression or form a target for male mate preference. We examined the function of the conspicuous dark eyes that female sand gobies temporarily display during courtship by experimentally testing if males preferred to associate with females with artificially darkened eyes and if dark eyes are displayed during female aggression. By observing interactions between a male and two females freely associating in an aquarium we also investigated in which context females naturally displayed dark eyes. We found that dark eyes were more likely to be displayed by more gravid females than less gravid females and possibly ahead of spawning, but that males did not respond behaviorally to dark eyes or prefer dark-eyed females. Females behaving aggressively did not display dark eyes. We suggest that dark eyes are not a signal per se but may be an aspect of female mate choice, possibly related to vision.


Royal Society Open Science | 2016

Correction to ‘Hypoxia increases the risk of egg predation in a nest-guarding fish'

Karin H. Olsson; Maria Norevik Andrén; Therése Larsson; Charlotta Kvarnemo

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1098/rsos.160326.].


Royal Society Open Science | 2016

Hypoxia increases the risk of egg predation in a nest-guarding fish

Karin H. Olsson; Charlotta Kvarnemo; Maria Norevik Andrén; Therése Larsson

For fish with parental care, a nest should meet both the oxygenation needs of the eggs and help protect them against predators. While a small nest opening facilitates the latter, it impedes the former and vice versa. We investigated how the presence of potential egg predators in the form of shore crabs Carcinus maenas affects nest building, egg fanning, defensive displays and filial cannibalism of egg-guarding male sand gobies Pomatoschistus minutus under two levels of dissolved oxygen. In the high oxygen treatment, males retained their nest opening size in the presence of crabs, while males in low oxygen built large nest openings both in the absence and presence of crabs, despite the fact that crabs were more likely to successfully intrude into nests with large entrances. Males in low oxygen also fanned more. In the presence of crabs males increased their defensive displays, but while males in high oxygen reduced fanning, males in low oxygen did not. Filial cannibalism was unaffected by treatment. Sand gobies thus prioritize egg ventilation over the protection afforded by small nest openings under hypoxia and adopt defensive behaviour to avert predator attention, even though this does not fully offset the threat from the egg predators.


Animal Behaviour | 2009

Relative costs of courtship behaviours in nest-building sand gobies

Karin H. Olsson; Charlotta Kvarnemo; Ola Svensson


Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2016

Differences in density-dependence drive dual offspring size strategies in fish.

Karin H. Olsson; Henrik Gislason; Ken Haste Andersen


Ecology | 2016

Adult and offspring size in the ocean: A database of size metrics and conversion factors

Anna Neuheimer; Martin Hartvig; Jan Heuschele; Samuel Hylander; Thomas Kiørboe; Karin H. Olsson; Julie Sainmont; Ken Haste Andersen


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2016

Testing reproductive allometry in fish

Karin H. Olsson; Henrik Gislason


Archive | 2015

When bigger is better - a theoretical and empirical examination of factors contributing to selection on offspring size in fsh

Karin H. Olsson; Henrik Gislason; Ken Haste Andersen

Collaboration


Dive into the Karin H. Olsson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ken Haste Andersen

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jan Heuschele

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julie Sainmont

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas Kiørboe

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Henrik Gislason

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge