Martin Österling
Karlstad University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Österling.
Hydrobiologia | 2014
Martin Österling; Jan-Olov Högberg
Today, land use impacts a major proportion of all streams. Here, landscape features in corridors along streams and water chemical factors were analyzed in relation to recruitment of the threatened freshwater pearl mussel (Margaritifera margaritifera) and its host fish the brown trout (Salmo trutta). Mussel recruitment and trout density were negatively related to forest clear-cuts. Mussel recruitment was negatively related to water color and turbidity. Therefore, the threats to the mussel may be severe, as low mussel recruitment may be caused by direct effects on the juvenile mussels and indirect effects on the host fish. High proportions of lakes and ponds were found to be positive for recruitment and for trout, and deciduous forest was positively related to trout. The combination of investigations at different scales at the landscape level and at in-stream levels may be applicable to find threats to other threatened species. The results indicate that forestry activities may negatively affect recruitment of freshwater pearl mussels and its host fish. Reductions of forestry activities and the retaining of intact quantity and quality of the riparian zones next to streams, both for the mussel and its host fish may be important conservation measures to restore freshwater pearl mussel populations.
Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 2018
Sören Nylin; Salvatore J. Agosta; Staffan Bensch; Walter A. Boeger; Mariana P. Braga; Daniel R. Brooks; Matthew L. Forister; Peter A. Hambäck; Eric P. Hoberg; Tommi Nyman; Alexander Schäpers; Alycia L. Stigall; Christopher W. Wheat; Martin Österling; Niklas Janz
Parasite-host and insect-plant research have divergent traditions despite the fact that most phytophagous insects live parasitically on their host plants. In parasitology it is a traditional assumption that parasites are typically highly specialized; cospeciation between parasites and hosts is a frequently expressed default expectation. Insect-plant theory has been more concerned with host shifts than with cospeciation, and more with hierarchies among hosts than with extreme specialization. We suggest that the divergent assumptions in the respective fields have hidden a fundamental similarity with an important role for potential as well as actual hosts, and hence for host colonizations via ecological fitting. A common research program is proposed which better prepares us for the challenges from introduced species and global change.
Environmental Biology of Fishes | 2014
Paul J. B. Hart; Eva Bergman; Olle Calles; Stina Eriksson; Stina Gustafsson; Linnea Lans; Johnny Norrgård; John Piccolo; Nina Rees; Johan Watz; Martin Österling; Larry Greenberg
Preferring one social partner over another can enhance fitness. This paper reports that juvenile grayling were significantly more likely to enter and forage in new, upstream habitats when paired with familiar versus unfamiliar social partners. Fish paired with unfamiliar partners or when alone were more reluctant to enter the new area. The entry times for both fish in a familiar pair were significantly correlated, but uncorrelated for unfamiliar fish. These differences between familiars and unfamiliars were consistent over a 2-week period. Fish with familiar partners spent more time within three body lengths of each other than did those with unfamiliars. The results are discussed in relation to optimality models of drift foraging, which do not included sociality. It is suggested that the social dimension creates a more dynamic foraging response to variable environmental conditions and could have consequences for growth.
bioRxiv | 2018
Denis Lafage; Eva Bergman; Lutz Eckstein; Martin Österling; Jonathan P. Sadler; John Piccolo
Cross-boundary fluxes of organisms and matter, termed “subsidies”, are now recognized to be reciprocal and of roughly equal importance for both aquatic and terrestrial systems, even if terrestrial input to aquatic ecosystems has received most attention. The magnitude of aquatic to terrestrial subsidies is well documented, but the drivers behind these subsidies and their utilization by terrestrial consumers are characteristically local scale studies, limiting the inferences that can be drawn for broader geographic scales. We therefore built and analyzed a database of stable isotope data extracted from 21 studies worldwide, to identify both landscape and local scale variables that may affect the diet of terrestrial predators in riparian ecosystems. Our meta-analysis revealed a greater magnitude of aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies (> 50%) than previously reported, albeit with large geographic and inter-annual variations. We demonstrated a large effect of landscape-scale factors on aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies, particularly anthropogenic land use and tree cover. Local human population was the only relevant factor at the local scale. We also found that studies on landscape-scale and anthropogenic land use effects on aquatic-to-terrestrial subsidies are currently strongly under-represented in the ecological literature. Such studies are needed to improve our understanding of how land use and environmental change might influence future patterns of biodiversity and ecosystem function.
Journal of Applied Ecology | 2010
Martin Österling; Björn Arvidsson; Larry Greenberg
Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2012
Björn Arvidsson; Jens Karlsson; Martin Österling
Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2013
Martin Österling; Bjørn Mejdell Larsen
Ecological Engineering | 2013
Stina Gustafsson; Martin Österling; Jostein Skurdal; Lea Dominique Schneider; Olle Calles
Biological Conservation | 2011
Martin Österling
International meeting on biology and conservation of freshwater bivalves. Braganca, Portugal. 2012-09-05. Poster. | 2012
Martin Österling