Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Liv Wennerberg is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Liv Wennerberg.


Molecular Ecology | 2000

Increase of genetic variation over time in a recently founded population of great reed warblers (Acrocephalus arundinaceus) revealed by microsatellites and DNA fingerprinting

Bengt Hansson; Staffan Bensch; Dennis Hasselquist; B.-G. Lillandt; Liv Wennerberg; T. von Schantz

Genetic similarity within pairs of individuals was examined using both 10 polymorphic microsatellite loci and multi‐locus DNA fingerprinting profiles in a semi‐isolated population of great reed warblers at Lake Kvismaren, south Central Sweden, in 1987–1993. The population was founded by a few individuals in 1978, followed by a gradual increase in numbers until 1988, since when the population has remained relatively stable with about 60 breeding birds. We have previously found that high genetic similarity between pair‐mates in the population during the early part of the study period reduced egg hatching success, and hence reproductive success. The measures of pairwise genetic similarity, microsatellite allele sharing and DNA fingerprinting band sharing, were highly correlated with pedigree‐based relatedness. Both microsatellite and DNA fingerprinting similarities between pair‐mates declined significantly over the study period, and the pattern was most pronounced in the DNA fingerprinting data. Analyses restricted to the microsatellite data showed that the average annual microsatellite similarity between pairwise combinations of individuals, as well as individual homozygosity in males, declined significantly over the study period, and that several immigrants carrying novel alleles entered the population during the study. Hence, the temporal decline in genetic similarity of mates in the population is probably a consequence of increased immigration, facilitated by the recent expansion of the species in the region. These results suggest that the population has now recovered genetically, or is in the process of recovering, from a recent founder event.


Molecular Ecology | 2001

Breeding origin and migration pattern of dunlin (Calidris alpina) revealed by mitochondrial DNA analysis.

Liv Wennerberg

The large‐scale migration of birds has been studied extensively by recoveries of ringed birds. However, there is very little ringing data from the arctic breeding grounds of waders. Here, the migration pattern of the dunlin, Calidris alpina, is studied with population genetic markers, using haplotype frequencies to estimate the breeding origin of migrating and wintering populations. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and restriction analysis of DNA from the mitochondrial control region was used to study the breeding origins of morphologically similar winter populations in the western Palaearctic, and to describe the population structure of the dunlin during winter. Also migrating dunlin from various stopover sites in Europe, Africa and Asia, were analysed with respect to their mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotypes. The genetic markers clearly show that the dunlin has a parallel migration system, with populations breeding in the western Palaearctic wintering mainly in the western part of the wintering range, and dunlin populations breeding further east wintering further east. The results also show that the distance between breeding and wintering area increases eastwards in this region.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 1996

Adoption or infanticide: Options of replacement males in the European starling

Henrik G. Smith; Liv Wennerberg; Torbjörn von Schantz

Abstract The behaviour of a male bird towards a potential mate and her clutch may depend both on his expected paternity and on the likelihood that she will produce a replacement clutch if he commits infanticide. In this study we evaluate the choices made by replacement male European starlings Sturnus vulgaris. By removing males before and during laying, we induced other males, mainly neighbours, to mate with the reproductively active females. When the original male was removed before laying, a new male adopted the subsequent clutch in 14 out of 15 cases. When ten females were widowed during their laying period, replacement males never adopted their clutches. The paternity of replacement males was a function of when they replaced the former male. When replacement occurred more than 3 days before egglaying, the new male fathered nearly all offspring; when it occurred the day before laying, the new male still fathered more than every second young. When the original male was removed during his mate’s laying period, in five out of ten cases a replacement male committed infanticide by throwing out the eggs, but this only occurred in one out of 15 cases when removal took place before laying. The evidence for infanticide actually being committed by the replacement male was circumstantial. Four out of six of the females affected by apparent infanticide produced replacement clutches in which the male presumably had higher paternity than in the original clutch. In all cases, the male adopted the replacement clutch. In five cases when the original male was removed during laying, the neighbours neither adopted the brood nor committed infanticide, although they sometimes were seen courting the widowed female and copulating with her. These cases occurred later during laying than those were males comitted infanticide. The time from infanticide to the laying of the replacement clutch tended to increase as infanticide was committed later in the laying sequence. We conclude that strategies of potential replacement males are influenced by their expected paternity in the current brood and the probability that the female will produce an early replacement clutch.


The Condor | 2011

A puzzling migratory detour : Are fueling conditions in Alaska driving the movement of juvenile sharp-tailed sandpipers?

Åke Lindström; Robert E. Gill; Sarah E. Jamieson; Brian J. McCaffery; Liv Wennerberg; Martin Wikelski; Marcel Klaassen

Abstract. Making a detour can be advantageous to a migrating bird if fuel-deposition rates at stopover sites along the detour are considerably higher than at stopover sites along a more direct route. One example of an extensive migratory detour is that of the Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (Calidris acuminata), of which large numbers of juveniles are found during fall migration in western Alaska. These birds take a detour of 1500–3400 km from the most direct route between their natal range in northeastern Siberia and nonbreeding areas in Australia. We studied the autumnal fueling rates and fuel loads of 357 Sharp-tailed Sandpipers captured in western Alaska. In early September the birds increased in mass at a rate of only 0.5% of lean body mass day-1. Later in September, the rate of mass increase was about 6% of lean body mass day-1, among the highest values found among similar-sized shorebirds around the world. Some individuals more than doubled their body mass because of fuel deposition, allowing nonstop flight of between 7100 and 9800 km, presumably including a trans-oceanic flight to the southern hemisphere. Our observations indicated that predator attacks were rare in our study area, adding another potential benefit of the detour. We conclude that the most likely reason for the Alaskan detour is that it allows juvenile Sharp-tailed Sandpipers to put on large fuel stores at exceptionally high rates.


Royal Society of London. Proceedings B. Biological Sciences; 263(1371), pp 797-801 (1996) | 1996

Sperm competition in the European starling (Sturnus vulgaris): An experimental study of mate switching

Henrik G. Smith; Liv Wennerberg; Torbjörn von Schantz

In apparently monogamous or polygynous birds, sperm from several males may compete to fertilize the eggs laid by one female. In this study we evaluate sperm competition in the European starling (sturnus vulgaris) by means of a mate-switching experiment. Already-mated males were removed between 1-7 d before their mates started egg-laying, resulting in the female remating with a new male. The original males’ parentage in the subsequent clutches was evaluated using DNA-fingerprinting. The original males fathered only two out of 46 eggs of those which were not likely to have been fertilized already when the males were removed. The low success of the original males can be attributed to a high within-pair copulation frequency during the assumed fertile period before laying and throughout the laying period, resulting in replacement males fathering most offspring. Thus the success of extra-pair copulations more than 2 d before egg-laying is probably very low. The results are discussed in relation to contrasting results from other mate-switching studies.


Oecologia | 2002

Geographical variation and population structure in the White-rumped Sandpiper Calidris fuscicollis as shown by morphology, mitochondrial DNA and carbon isotope ratios

Liv Wennerberg; Marcel Klaassen; Åke Lindström


Ibis | 2008

Genetic and morphological variation in Dunlin Calidris alpina breeding in the Palearctic tundra

Liv Wennerberg; Noél Holmgren; Paul-Eric Jönsson; Torbjörn von Schantz


Hereditas | 2002

Isolation and cross-species amplification of microsatellite loci in the Siberian jay (Perisoreus infaustus).

Bo-Go Ran Lillandt; Staffan Bensch; Bengt Hansson; Liv Wennerberg; Torbjörn von Schantz


Polar Biology | 2001

Geographical variation in the timing of breeding and moult in dunlin Calidris alpina on the Palearctic tundra

Noél Holmgren; Paul Eric Jönsson; Liv Wennerberg


Ardea | 2002

Fuel stores of juvenile waders on autumn migration in high arctic Canada

Åke Lindström; Marcel Klaassen; Theunis Piersma; Noél Holmgren; Liv Wennerberg

Collaboration


Dive into the Liv Wennerberg's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian J. McCaffery

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert E. Gill

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge