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Featured researches published by Lenn Jerling.


Ecosystems | 2010

The Impact of Cormorants on Plant–Arthropod Food Webs on Their Nesting Islands

Gundula S. Kolb; Lenn Jerling; Peter A. Hambäck

This study investigated the effects of cormorant colonies on plant–arthropod island food webs, the consequences of nutrient-rich runoff on marine communities, and feedback loops from marine to terrestrial ecosystems. Terrestrial plant responses were as expected, with the highest plant biomass on islands with low nest density and the highest nitrogen (N) content on islands with high nest density. In contrast to our hypothesis, we found no uniform density response across guilds. Among herbivores, the variable responses may depend on the relative importance of plant quality or quantity. As expected, nutrient-rich runoff entered water bodies surrounding cormorant nesting islands, but only at high nest density, and increased the density of emerging insects. This created a potential feed-back loop to spiders (major terrestrial predators), where stable isotope analyses suggested great use of chironomids. Contrary to our expectation, this potential feed-back did not result in the highest spider density on islands with a high cormorant nest density. Web spiders showed no changes in density on active cormorant islands, and lycosids were actually less abundant on active cormorant islands compared to reference islands. The variable response of spiders despite increased dipteran densities, and also in other consumer groups, may be due to direct negative effects of cormorants on soil chemistry, vegetation cover, and other density regulating forces (for example, top–down forces) not studied here. This study highlights the importance of including processes in the surrounding marine ecosystem to understand the impacts of seabirds on the food web structures of their nesting islands.


Folia Geobotanica | 2002

Species richness, extinction and immigration rates of vascular plants on islands in the Stockholm archipelago, Sweden, during a century of ceasing management

Anders Löfgren; Lenn Jerling

Survey of eighteen islands in the Stockholm archipelago from 1884–1908 was re-examined during 1996–1998 to investigate how island size, degree of isolation and human impact affect the species number, extinction and immigration rates of terrestrial vascular plants. Cattle grazing and haymaking was widely and commonly in practice on the islands, but became less intensive since the 1920s and ceased during the 1960s.In the first survey species number was positively correlated with area and negatively correlated with distance to mainland. This pattern was similar in the later survey. However, the number of surrounding islands was positively correlated with island specific species number. During the period from the first to the second survey twenty species disappeared and ninety-three appeared as new. The increased abundance of trees, bushes and shade tolerant herbs suggest that this increase in species number is the effect of an ongoing succession in the landscape. The absolute extinction rate was negatively correlated with island size and distance to mainland, while the immigration rate was positively correlated to island size. The extinction rate was negatively correlated with the distance to mainland probably due to an earlier more intense cultural exploitation closer to the mainland. Our measure of human impact, the presence of houses on islands, was not related to terrestrial plant species number or extinction rate. However, there was a trend for the immigration rate to be higher on islands with houses in 1942 than those without, indicating the importance of human activities for dispersal and/or recruitment.


Plant Ecology | 1988

Clone dynamics, population dynamics and vegetation pattern ofGlaux maritima on a Baltic sea shore meadow

Lenn Jerling

The vegetative propagation ofGlaux maritima is correlated with growth habit which is inturn related to the light environment. Plant form and vegetative behaviour were recorded 1980–1984 and an attempt to correlate this to population dynamics and vegetation development was made. The type of vegetative propagation gives rise to a size hierarchy of propagules and thus a strong within clone dynamics. A range of life stages may be permanently present in a clone. Clones from different parts of a shore meadow have different patterns of vegetative propagation. The offshoot growth behaviour can be used to explain vegetation patterns and neighbour relationships.


Plant Ecology | 1988

Population dynamics ofGlaux maritima (L.) along a distributional cline

Lenn Jerling

Population fluctuations ofGlaux maritima, along a transect on a Baltle sea shore meadow, were recorded between 1979 and 1983. A bimodal distribution in numbers along the transect reflects the variation in factors regulating numbers: The two maintenance systems of the species, vegetative propagation and sexual reproduction play different roles. Vegetative propagation is fast and responds quickly to variations in the environment. The seeds germinate in strongly fluctuating temperatures which are triggered by disturbances such as flooding, damaging the vegetation.


Plant Ecology | 1985

Population dynamics of Plantago maritima along a distributional gradient on a Baltic seashore meadow

Lenn Jerling

Demographical studies of Plantago maritima along a 60 m long gradient, from waterfront to terrestrial meadow, revealed a correspondence in population dynamics. The gradient can be seen as a transition from dominance of density-independent mortality factors, mainly flooding, to a dominance of density-dependent mortality, mainly due to competition for light. In lower parts the variation in density of plants varies greatly between years, the flowering and seeding are good as well as the establishment of seedlings, i.e. there is a high turnover rate. In upper parts the flowering, seeding and establishment are poorer but the life expectancy is longer which results in a low turnover rate. The establishment of seedlings is mainly controlled by the access to light, in lower parts now and then dominated by the effects of flooding. Population characteristics change along the gradient so that reproductive effort, in terms of produced seeds per rosette, and allocation of biomass into reproductive organs is higher in lower parts but the reverse in upper, specimens in lower parts also start to grow and flower earlier.


Ecography | 1983

Composition and viability of the seed bank along a successional gradient on a Baltic sea shore meadow

Lenn Jerling


Ecography | 1982

Effects of selective grazing by cattle on the reproduction of Plantago maritima

Lenn Jerling; Marja Andersson


Ecography | 2012

The impact of nesting cormorants on plant and arthropod diversity

Gundula S. Kolb; Lenn Jerling; Carolina Essenberg; Cecilia Palmborg; Peter A. Hambäck


Ecography | 1981

Effects of microtopography on the summer survival of Plantago maritima seedlings

Lenn Jerling


Nordic Journal of Botany | 1998

Linnaeus' Flora Kofsöensis revisited — floristic changes during 260 years in a small island of the lake Mälaren

Lenn Jerling

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