Mikael Jönsson
Lund University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mikael Jönsson.
Journal of Fish Biology | 2011
Mikael Jönsson; Samuel Hylander; Lynn Ranåker; P.A. Nilsson; Christer Brönmark
Young-of-the-year pike Esox lucius foraging on copepods experienced different foraging success depending on prey pigmentation in water visually degraded by brown colouration or algae. Both attack rate and prey consumption rate were higher for E. lucius foraging on transparent prey in brown water, whereas the opposite was true in algal turbid water. Pigments in copepod prey may have a cryptic function in brown water instead of a photo-protective function even if prey-size selectivity was stronger than selection based on pigmentation in juvenile E. lucius.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Jakob Brodersen; José Luis Rodriguez-Gil; Mikael Jönsson; Lars-Anders Hansson; Christer Brönmark; P. Anders Nilsson; Alice Nicolle; Olof Berglund
The predicted global warming may affect freshwater systems at several organizational levels, from organism to ecosystem. Specifically, in temperate regions, the projected increase of winter temperatures may have important effects on the over-winter biology of a range of organisms and especially for fish and other ectothermic animals. However, temperature effects on organisms may be directed strongly by resource availability. Here, we investigated whether over-winter loss of biomass and lipid content of juvenile roach (Rutilus rutilus) was affected by the physiologically relatively small (2-5°C) changes of winter temperatures predicted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), under both natural and experimental conditions. This was investigated in combination with the effects of food availability. Finally, we explored the potential for a correlation between lake temperature and resource levels for planktivorous fish, i.e., zooplankton biomass, during five consecutive winters in a south Swedish lake. We show that small increases in temperature (+2°C) affected fish biomass loss in both presence and absence of food, but negatively and positively respectively. Temperature alone explained only a minor part of the variation when food availability was not taken into account. In contrast to other studies, lipid analyses of experimental fish suggest that critical somatic condition rather than critical lipid content determined starvation induced mortality. Our results illustrate the importance of considering not only changes in temperature when predicting organism response to climate change but also food-web interactions, such as resource availability and predation. However, as exemplified by our finding that zooplankton over-winter biomass in the lake was not related to over-winter temperature, this may not be a straightforward task.
Journal of Comparative Physiology A-neuroethology Sensory Neural and Behavioral Physiology | 2014
Mikael Jönsson; Øystein Varpe; Tomasz M Kozłowski; Jørgen Berge; Ronald H. H. Kröger
Arctic and boreal/temperate species are likely to be evolutionary adapted to different light regimes. Currently, the boreal/temperate Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) is coexisting with the native polar cod (Boreogadus saida) in the Arctic waters around Svalbard, Norway. Here, we studied light/dark adaptative optical plasticity of their eye lenses by exposing fish to bright light during the polar night. Schlieren photography, high-definition laser scanning and ray tracing were used to determine the optical properties of excised crystalline lenses. Both species have multifocal lenses, an optical adaptation for improved color vision. In polar cod, the optical properties of the lens were independent of light exposure. In the more southern Atlantic cod, the optical properties of the lens changed within hours upon exposure to light, even after months of darkness. Such fast optical adjustment has previously only been shown in a tropical cichlid. During the polar night the Atlantic cod lens seems to be unregulated and dysfunctional since it had an unsuitable focal length and severe spherical aberration. We present a system, to our knowledge unique, for studying visual plasticity on different timescales in relation to evolutionary history and present the first study on the polar cod visual system.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Lynn Ranåker; Jens Persson; Mikael Jönsson; P. Anders Nilsson; Christer Brönmark
Environmental change may affect predator-prey interactions in lakes through deterioration of visual conditions affecting foraging success of visually oriented predators. Environmental change in lakes includes an increase in humic matter causing browner water and reduced visibility, affecting the behavioural performance of both piscivores and prey. We studied diurnal patterns of prey selection in piscivorous pikeperch (Sander lucioperca) in both field and laboratory investigations. In the field we estimated prey selectivity and prey availability during day and night in a clear and a brown water lake. Further, prey selectivity during day and night conditions was studied in the laboratory where we manipulated optical conditions (humic matter content) of the water. Here, we also studied the behaviours of piscivores and prey, focusing on foraging-cycle stages such as number of interests and attacks by the pikeperch as well as the escape distance of the prey fish species. Analyses of gut contents from the field study showed that pikeperch selected perch (Perca fluviatilis) over roach (Rutilus rutilus) prey in both lakes during the day, but changed selectivity towards roach in both lakes at night. These results were corroborated in the selectivity experiments along a brown-water gradient in day and night light conditions. However, a change in selectivity from perch to roach was observed when the optical condition was heavily degraded, from either brown-stained water or light intensity. At longer visual ranges, roach initiated escape at distances greater than pikeperch attack distances, whereas perch stayed inactive making pikeperch approach and attack at the closest range possible. Roach anti-predatory behaviour decreased in deteriorated visual conditions, altering selectivity patterns. Our results highlight the importance of investigating both predator and prey responses to visibility conditions in order to understand the effects of degrading optical conditions on piscivore-prey interaction strength and thereby ecosystem responses to brownification of waters.
Zebrafish | 2017
Tomasz M Kozłowski; Mikael Jönsson; Fredrik Ek; Roger Olsson; Ronald H. H. Kröger
We intended to perform optical and structural measurements on larval zebrafish eyes at 5 days post fertilization, that is, the earliest age at which zebrafish show visually guided behavior. However, excised larval crystalline lenses deteriorated quickly if immersed in a medium that gives good results with adult lenses from a variety of fish species. We suspected that the larvae have body fluids of lower osmolality and tested a medium with 240 mOsm, which is 75% of the established adult value of 320 mOsm. The optical quality of freshly excised and immersed lenses was used to judge the osmotic matches. In addition, we tested how well the shape of the eye is preserved in fixatives of different osmolalities. In both cases, 240 mOsm produced the best results. Immersed lenses performed better and the fixed eyes had a more natural shape. Our findings indicate that zebrafish body fluids have lower osmolality in larvae than in adults. This is probably due to an unfavorable body surface-to-volume ratio and incompletely developed regulatory mechanisms. Body fluid osmolality deviating from the adult value has to be taken into account in optical and histological work.
Journal of Plankton Research | 2011
Samuel Hylander; Therese Jephson; Karen Lebret; Jessica von Einem; Tony Fagerberg; Esteban Balseiro; Beatriz Modenutti; María Sol Souza; Cecilia Laspoumaderes; Mikael Jönsson; Peter Ljungberg; Alice Nicolle; P.A. Nilsson; Lynn Ranåker; Lars-Anders Hansson
Freshwater Biology | 2012
Lynn Ranåker; Mikael Jönsson; P. Anders Nilsson; Christer Brönmark
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2013
Mikael Jönsson; Lynn Ranåker; P. Anders Nilsson; Christer Brönmark
Hydrobiologia | 2011
Mikael Jönsson; Lynn Ranåker; Alice Nicolle; Peter Ljungberg; Tony Fagerberg; Samuel Hylander; Therese Jephson; Karen Lebret; Jessica von Einem; Lars-Anders Hansson; P. Anders Nilsson; Esteban Balseiro; Beatriz Modenutti
Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2012
Mikael Jönsson; Lynn Ranåker; P. Anders Nilsson; Christer Brönmark