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Dive into the research topics where Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki is active.

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Featured researches published by Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki.


Ecoscience | 2009

Urbanization and stability of a bird community in winter

Jukka Suhonen; Jukka Jokimäki; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki; Harri Hakkarainen; Esa Huhta; Kimmo Inki; Petri Suorsa

Abstract: The main objective of this study was to analyze between-winter stability of bird communities along latitudinal (950 km) and urban gradients (from small village to towns) in Finland. Birds were surveyed at the same 30-ha study plots using the same methods in 31 villages and town centres in the winters of 1991–1992 and 1999–2000. Species richness did not differ between the 2 study winters, but variation in total abundance of birds increased with increasing urbanization. However, urbanization reduced variation in wintering bird community structure. Species richness, density of wintering birds, and dissimilarity of wintering bird communities did not vary with latitude. According to our results, the level of urbanization was a more important factor than latitude in explaining the structure of the bird community in winter. We assume that the presence of a continuous, rich, and diverse supply of food offered by humans with increasing urbanization may explain variation in species abundances and stability in urbanized ecosystems.


The Auk | 2006

RESPONSES OF PARASITIZED AND UNPARASITIZED COMMON REDSTART (PHOENICURUS PHOENICURUS) POPULATIONS AGAINST ARTIFICIAL CUCKOO PARASITISM

Jarkko Rutila; Jukka Jokimäki; Jesús M. Avilés; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki

Abstract Brood parasitism selects for defensive mechanisms that enhance host fitness. Therefore, host populations under different parasitism pressures may express different levels of defense against brood parasites. We tested the rejection responses of currently parasitized and unparasitized Common Redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus) populations in Finland to artificial Common Cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) eggs. We predicted a higher level of defense in the parasitized population, but in fact the rejection rate was higher in the nonparasitized population. Nonmimetic artificial eggs were rejected more often than mimetic ones. Desertion probability was higher in the nonparasitized population and was independent of artificial egg type. Common Redstarts in the parasitized population rejected the artificial eggs mostly through ejection, whereas desertion was a more frequent rejection method in the nonparasitized population. Our results suggest that current selection pressures from brood parasites do not always explain the current levels of defense. Respuestas de Poblaciones Parasitadas y No Parasitadas de Phoenicurus phoenicurus Contra el Parasitismo Artificial de Cuculus canorus


Annales Zoologici Fennici | 2012

Residential areas support overwintering possibilities of most bird species

Jukka Jokimäki; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki

Spatial variation in wintering bird communities in different types of urban residential areas is poorly understood. The objective of tills study was to find out which bird species from the regional species pool are able to inhabit residential areas, whether bird communities in different types of residential area differ from one another, and what are the factors affecting birds. We conducted our study in five apartment-building areas, five family-house areas, and five villages in northern Finland by using the single-visit study plot method during five winters, i.e. 1998/1999–2003/2004. Oldgrowth-forest-specialist species, in particular, avoided residential areas, whereas the other species appeared to benefit from residential development. The species richness, the total number of individuals, and the abundance of most of the species were higher in the family-house areas and in villages than in apartment-building areas. The proportion of individuals belonging to resident species was higher in the apartment-building areas than in the other habitats, whereas the proportion of individuals belonging to feeding-table species was higher in the villages than in the other habitats. The species richness and the total number of individuals increased with the increasing number of feeding tables and decreased with increasingly larger proportions of apartment buildings within the study plot. Parus montanus, P. major, P. caeruleus, Passer domesticus, and Carduelis flammea benefitted from feeding tables. Our study demonstrated that carefully planned winter feeding programmes can enhance the wintering possibilities for birds, and thus promote the biodiversity in urban ecosystems at northern latitudes.


European Journal of Ecology | 2016

Urbanization and species occupancy frequency distribution patterns in core zone areas of European towns

Jukka Jokimäki; Jukka Suhonen; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki

Abstract More and more of the globe is becoming urbanized. Thus, characterizing the distribution and abundance of species occupying different towns is critically important. The primary aim of this study was to examine the effect of urbanization and latitude on the patterns of species occupancy frequency distribution (SOFD) in urban core zones of European towns (38 towns) along a 3850-km latitudinal gradient. We determined which of the three most common distributional models (unimodal-satellite dominant, bimodal symmetrical, and bimodal asymmetrical) provides the best fit for urban bird communities using the AICc-model selection procedure. Our pooled data exhibited a unimodal-satellite SOFD pattern. This result is inconsistent with the results from previous studies that have been conducted in more natural habitats, where data have mostly exhibited a bimodal SOFD pattern. Large-sized towns exhibited a bimodal symmetric pattern, whereas smaller-sized towns followed a unimodal- -satellite dominated SOFD pattern. The difference in environmental diversity is the most plausible explanation for this observation because habitat diversity of the study plots decreased as urbanization increased. Southern towns exhibited unimodal satellite SOFD patterns, central European towns exhibited bimodal symmetric, and northern towns exhibited bimodal asymmetric SOFD patterns. One explanation for this observation is that urbanization is a more recent phenomenon in the north than in the south. Therefore, more satellite species are found in northern towns than in southern towns. We found that core species in European towns are widely distributed, and their regional population sizes are large. Our results indicated that earlier urbanized species are more common in towns than the species that have urbanized later. We concluded that both the traits of bird species and characteristics of towns modified the SOFD patterns of urban-breeding birds. In the future, it would be interesting to study how the urban history impacts SOFD patterns and if the SOFD patterns of wintering and breeding assemblages are the same.


European Journal of Ecology | 2017

Scale dependence of biotic homogenisation by urbanisation: a comparison of urban bird communities between central Argentina and northern Finland: European Journal of Ecology

Lucas M. Leveau; Jukka Jokimäki; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki

Abstract Recent studies showed contrasting results about the homogenising force of urbanisation on bird community composition at large and regional scales. We studied whether urbanisation promotes the homogenisation of wintering bird communities and if this varies when comparing towns located within a specific region and towns located in two different biomes of two countries. We used both similarity indices based on the presence/absence data and the abundance data in comparing communities. Processes governing bird community dissimilarity between urbanisation levels were examined with the partitioning of Sörensen index in species turnover and nestedness. We made bird surveys in town centres and suburban habitats of three cities located in the Pampean region of Argentina and in the boreal region of Finland using a single-visit study plot method. Rarefacted species richness did not differ amongst the town centres between the countries, but it was higher in the suburban areas of Argentina than in Finland. At the country-level comparison, we found a higher similarity amongst the town centres than amongst the suburban areas; whereas at the regional comparison, similarity between town centres was comparable to the similarity between suburban areas. The use of an abundance-based index produced a higher similarity between town centre communities of both countries than when using a presence-based index. The dissimilarity between habitats in Argentina was related to nestedness and to species turnover in Finland. Our results indicate that urban-based biotic homogenisation of bird communities is dependent on the scale used, being more evident when comparing cities of different biomes where the same and abundant bird species, such as sparrows and doves, dominate. At the regional scale, quite a high beta-diversity can still be found within urban habitats. Processes of community dissimilarity between urban habitats may differ according to the regional pool of species, being more related to nestedness toward the tropics.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Adjusting risk-taking to the annual cycle of long-distance migratory birds

Peter Mikula; Mario Díaz; Tomáš Albrecht; Jukka Jokimäki; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki; Gal Kroitero; Anders Pape Møller; Piotr Tryjanowski; Reuven Yosef; Martin Hromada

Life-history theory predicts that current behaviour affects future reproduction, implying that animals should optimise their escape strategies to reflect fitness costs and benefits of premature escape. Both costs and benefits of escape may change temporally with important consequences for the evolution of escape strategies. Moreover, escape strategies of species may differ according to their positions on slow–fast pace of life gradients. We studied risk-taking in long-distance migratory animals, waders (Charadriiformes), during the annual cycle, i.e., breeding in Europe, stopover in the Middle East and wintering in tropical Africa. Phylogenetically informed comparative analyses revealed that risk-taking (measured as flight initiation distance, FID) changed significantly over the year, being lowest during breeding and peaking at stopover sites. Similarly, relationships between risk-taking and life-history traits changed among stages of the annual cycle. While risk-taking significantly decreased with increasing body mass during breeding, risk-taking–body mass relationship became marginally significant in winter and disappeared during migration. The positive trend of risk-taking along slow–fast pace of life gradient measured as adult survival was only found during breeding. The season-dependent relationships between risk-taking and life history traits suggest that migrating animals respond to fluctuating environments by adopting behavioural plasticity.


Biological Conservation | 2006

Avifauna homogenisation by urbanisation: Analysis at different European latitudes

Philippe Clergeau; Solène Croci; Jukka Jokimäki; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki; Marco Dinetti


Journal of Biogeography | 2003

Spatial similarity of urban bird communities: a multiscale approach

Jukka Jokimäki; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki


Ecography | 2005

Evaluation of the "safe nesting zone" hypothesis across an urban gradient: a multi-scale study

Jukka Jokimäki; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki; Alberto Sorace; Esteban Fernández-Juricic; Iñaki Rodriguez-Prieto; María Dolores Jiménez


Journal of Biogeography | 2002

Winter bird communities in urban habitats: a comparative study between central and northern Europe

Jukka Jokimäki; Philippe Clergeau; Marja-Liisa Kaisanlahti-Jokimäki

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Esa Huhta

Finnish Forest Research Institute

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Philippe Clergeau

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jarkko Rutila

University of Eastern Finland

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