Matti Ketola
University of Turku
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Featured researches published by Matti Ketola.
Hydrobiologia | 1992
Sanna Koivisto; Matti Ketola; Mari Walls
The study was carried out to assess the effect of both short-and long-term copper exposure on five cladoceran species differing in body size and habitat, i.e. Daphnia magna, D. pulex, D. galeata, Bosmina longirostris, and Chydorus sphaericus. The species-specific 48 h EC50 values for fed neonates were used to determine the chronic exposure levels (52% and 65% of the EC50 values). The experiment was run at two food levels. Long-term copper exposure retarded growth in each of the species studied. However, the copper treatments did not affect the clutch sizes of the experimental animals. At a low food level, copper exposure increased mortality in every species studied. The intrinsic rate of increase, r, was reduced in the copper-exposed populations. The sensitivity to copper was higher in the small lake species, compared to D. magna and D. pulex that are commonly used in standard toxicity tests. Of the species studied, B. longirostris had the highest sensitivity to both acute and chronic copper stress. The different sensitivities of the species studied are discussed in an ecological context.
Oecologia | 1991
Mari Walls; Hal Caswell; Matti Ketola
SummaryWe examined the demographic costs of Chaoborus-induced defensive spine structures in Daphnia pulex. Our aim was to assess the role of resource limitation and the interaction effects of limiting food level and antipredator structures on fitness of D. pulex and to pinpoint those life stages that are most sensitive to changes in the defence regime. Chaoborus-induced and typical morphotypes of D. pulex were reared at high and low food concentrations. Instar-based matrix population models were used to quantify the effects of predator-induction, food and their interaction on fitness of D. pulex. Predator-induction caused a statistically significant reduction in fitness at low food levels, but not at high food levels. Sensitivity analyses revealed that the fitness effects were primarily due to changes in the growth rate in instars 1–5, and secondarily to small reductions in the fertility of instars 5–10. The interaction between Chaoborus exposure and low food concentration was negative, and mediated through growth and fertility components. Both these components were reduced more in the Chaoborus-exposed, low food treatment than would be expected in the absence of interaction.
Aquatic Toxicology | 1995
Sanna Koivisto; Matti Ketola
Abstract Daphnia magna, and to a lesser extent D. pulex, are commonly used in standardised laboratory toxicity tests. Neither of these species is common in lakes inhabited by fish which is explained by strong predation pressure by fish. They also exhibit different life-history strategies compared to lake-inhabiting species like Bosmina. Daphnids produce many small (relative to adult size) juveniles whereas the opposite is true for Bosmina. The large neonate size allows an earlier maturation of Bosmina compared to Daphnia. In the present study the effects of copper (10–30 ppb) on life-history traits of D. pulex and B. longirostris were compared. The only significant copper effect on D. pulex was a minor delay of maturation. On the contrary, negative impacts of the same copper concentrations were found on the survival, growth, maturation age, and fecundity of B. longirostris. The population growth rate (r) of B. longirostris decreased with increasing copper concentration. The study showed that B. longirostris was about two times more sensitive to copper stress than D. pulex.
Hydrobiologia | 1989
Matti Ketola; Ilppo Vuorinen
Contamination of the culture water by high densities of phantom midge larvae, Chaoborus sp. resulted in size diminution, retarded reproduction and decrease in the clutch size of D. pulex, and size diminution of D. magna. Furthermore, D. pulex suffered heavy mortality. The results are discussed in the context of the hypothesis that energy is expended in the formation of defensive cyclomorphic spines. Other hypotheses are also discussed.
Hydrobiologia | 1994
Sari Repka; Matti Ketola; Mari Walls
It has been proposed that the predator-induced defensive neck spine in Daphnia pulex has a demographic cost. Our results show that this cost is not merely an allocation cost related to the formation and maintenance of the neck spine. In a life table experiment, we tested whether spine induction and life history traits in D. pulex are affected by different invertebrate predators: first and third instar Chaoborus, fourth instar Mochlonyx and two size classes of Notonecta and Dytiscus larvae. D. pulex showed sensitivity to the different predators. Predator-exposure affected one or more of the following life history traits of D. pulex: the timing of first reproduction, clutch size, and growth. In some cases, exposure to predators altered life history traits when neck spine induction did not occur. These shifts in life history traits occurring in the absence of spine induction may be caused by behavioral or physiological changes triggered by the predators.
Limnology and Oceanography | 1994
Marko Reinikainen; Matti Ketola; Mari Walls
Limnology and Oceanography | 1989
Mari Walls; Matti Ketola
Journal of Plankton Research | 1995
Marko Reinikainen; Matti Ketola; Matti Jantunen; Man Walts
Limnology and Oceanography | 1989
Ilppo Vuorinen; Matti Ketola; Mari Walls
Journal of Plankton Research | 1995
Sari Repka; Mari Walls; Matti Ketola