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Featured researches published by Thomas Palo.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2003

Human Hantavirus Infections, Sweden

Gert E. Olsson; Fredrik Dalerum; Birger Hörnfeldt; Fredrik Elgh; Thomas Palo; Per Juto; Clas Ahlm

The prevalent human hantavirus disease in Sweden is nephropathia epidemica, which is caused by Puumala virus and shed by infected bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus). To evaluate temporal and spatial patterns of this disease, we studied 2,468 reported cases from a highly disease-endemic region in northern Sweden. We found that, in particular, middle-aged men living in rural dwellings near coastal areas were overrepresented. The case-patients were most often infected in late autumn, when engaged in activities near or within manmade rodent refuges. Of 862 case-patients confident about the site of virus exposure, 50% were concentrated within 5% of the study area. The incidence of nephropathia epidemica was significantly correlated with bank vole numbers within monitored rodent populations in part of the region. Understanding this relationship may help forestall future human hantavirus outbreaks.


Ecology and Society | 2016

Operationalizing ecosystem-based adaptation : harnessing ecosystem services to buffer communities against climate change

Christine Wamsler; Lisa Niven; Thomas H. Beery; Torleif Bramryd; Nils Ekelund; Ingemar Jönsson; Adelina Osmani; Thomas Palo; Sanna Stålhammar

Ecosystem-based approaches for climate change adaptation are promoted at international, national, and local levels by both scholars and practitioners. However, local planning practices that support these approaches are scattered, and measures are neither systematically implemented nor comprehensively reviewed. Against this background, this paper advances the operationalization of ecosystem-based adaptation by improving our knowledge of how ecosystem-based approaches can be considered in local planning (operational governance level). We review current research on ecosystem services in urban areas and examine four Swedish coastal municipalities to identify the key characteristics of both implemented and planned measures that support ecosystem-based adaptation. The results show that many of the measures that have been implemented focus on biodiversity rather than climate change adaptation, which is an important factor in only around half of all measures. Furthermore, existing measures are limited in their focus regarding the ecological structures and the ecosystem services they support, and the hazards and risk factors they address. We conclude that a more comprehensive approach to sustainable ecosystem-based adaptation planning and its systematic mainstreaming is required. Our framework for the analysis of ecosystem-based adaptation measures proved to be useful in identifying how ecosystem-related matters are addressed in current practice and strategic planning, and in providing knowledge on how ecosystem-based adaptation can further be considered in urban planning practice. Such a systematic analysis framework can reveal the ecological structures, related ecosystem services, and risk-reducing approaches that are missing and why. This informs the discussion about why specific measures are not considered and provides pathways for alternate measures/designs, related operations, and policy processes at different scales that can foster sustainable adaptation and transformation in municipal governance and planning.


Science of The Total Environment | 1994

Influence of herbivory on caesium turnover in a forest ecosystem

Ronny Bergman; Thomas Palo; Torbjörn Nylén; Per Nelin

The effect of herbivory by bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus) and moose (Alces alces) in relation to litterfall in a boreal forest is analysed. The main purpose is to estimate the relative importance of these processes for the transfer of caesium-137 to soil. Biomasses of litterfall and food consumption were selected from different forest biotopes. The analysis of the input and output of caesium-137 in the vole and moose populations is based on mass balance calculations for caesium-137 in steady state conditions. From this assessment, herbivory appears to be within an order of magnitude of litterfall. With due regard to the lower caesium level in litterfall than in living plant tissue, transfer of radioactive caesium by herbivory is seen to be even higher in comparison to that by litterfall, than apparent from the corresponding transfer of organic matter. In addition, the availability of caesium-137 from animal excrements is expected to be high and fast, which further emphasises the relative importance of herbivory and feed-back from vegetation to soil.


Ecology and Society | 2005

Climate Variability Reveals Complex Events for Tularemia Dynamics in Man and Mammals

Thomas Palo; Clas Ahlm; Arne Tärnvik

Tularemia is caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis, but the natural reservoir is unknown and environmental conditions for outbreaks in mammals and man are poorly understood. The present study analyzed the synchrony between the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index, the number of human cases of tularemia reported in Sweden, and the density of hares. Climate variation at a lag of 2 yr explained as a single factor ~ 27% of the variation in the number of tularemia cases over time. A low NAO index, indicating cold winters, and low water flow in rivers during the coming summer were associated with high numbers of human cases of tularemia 2 yr later. The number of mountain hares was not related to NAO or to the number of cases of tularemia. The change in mountain hare numbers was negatively associated with the number of human cases, showing the sensitivity of this species to the disease. Low turnover in water environments may at some point in time trigger a chain of events leading to increased replication of F. tularensis via unknown reservoirs and/or vectors that affect humans and mammals. A possible increase in the NAO index with a future warmer climate would not be expected to facilitate a higher frequency of tularemia outbreaks in Sweden.


Epidemiology and Infection | 1998

A minority of seropositive wild bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) show evidence of current Puumala virus infection

Oleg A. Alexeyev; Clas Ahlm; Fredrik Elgh; Birgitta Aava; Thomas Palo; Bo Settergren; Arne Tärnvik; Göran Wadell; Per Juto

Bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) serve as the reservoir for Puumala (PUU) virus, the aetiologic agent of nephropathia epidemica. The animals are believed to be persistently infected and the occurrence of serum antibodies is usually taken as an evidence of active infection. We found serum antibodies to PUU virus in 42 of 299 wild bank voles captured in a PUU virus endemic area. PUU virus RNA was demonstrated in lung specimens of 11 of these 42 animals and in 2 of them antigen was also found. Thus in the lungs of 31 of 42 seropositive animals neither PUU virus RNA nor antigen was detected. In 2 of 257 seronegative animals, lung specimens showed presence of PUU virus antigen and RNA. Isolation of PUU virus from lung tissue was successful in all 4 antigen-positive bank voles but in none of 16 tested antigen-negative animals. In conclusion, only a minority of bank voles with serum antibodies to PUU virus showed evidence of current infection.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology | 1982

Fibre distribution and fibre diameters in two muscles of swedish moose (Alces alces L.)

Thomas Palo; Karl-Heinz Kiessling

1. Muscle samples from M. semitendinosus (S) and M. longissimus (L) were taken by autopsy, shortly after killing from 36 moose ranging approximately from 5 months to 6 yr of age. 2. The moose muscle contains three populations of fibres namely beta R, alpha R and alpha W. The muscles have a high proportion of beta R and alpha R fibres which indicates a dependence on oxidative metabolism for muscle function. 3. The moose have developed their ultimate fibre distribution at about the age of 5 months, but even after that an increase in fibre diameter for beta and alpha fibres in the (S) muscle was noted with increasing ae. This increase ceases in animals older than 1.5 yr.


Sustainability Science | 2018

On the road to ‘research municipalities’: analysing transdisciplinarity in municipal ecosystem services and adaptation planning

Ebba Brink; Christine Wamsler; Maria Adolfsson; Monica Axelsson; Thomas H. Beery; Helena Björn; Torleif Bramryd; Nils Ekelund; Therese Jephson; Widar Narvelo; Barry Ness; K. Ingemar Jönsson; Thomas Palo; Magnus Sjeldrup; Sanna Stålhammar; Geraldine Thiere

Transdisciplinary research and collaboration is widely acknowledged as a critical success factor for solution-oriented approaches that can tackle complex sustainability challenges, such as biodiversity loss, pollution, and climate-related hazards. In this context, city governments’ engagement in transdisciplinarity is generally seen as a key condition for societal transformation towards sustainability. However, empirical evidence is rare. This paper presents a self-assessment of a joint research project on ecosystem services and climate adaptation planning (ECOSIMP) undertaken by four universities and seven Swedish municipalities. We apply a set of design principles and guiding questions for transdisciplinary sustainability projects and, on this basis, identify key aspects for supporting university–municipality collaboration. We show that: (1) selecting the number and type of project stakeholders requires more explicit consideration of the purpose of societal actors’ participation; (2) concrete, interim benefits for participating practitioners and organisations need to be continuously discussed; (3) promoting the ‘inter’, i.e., interdisciplinary and inter-city learning, can support transdisciplinarity and, ultimately, urban sustainability and long-term change. In this context, we found that design principles for transdisciplinarity have the potential to (4) mitigate project shortcomings, even when transdisciplinarity is not an explicit aim, and (5) address differences and allow new voices to be heard. We propose additional guiding questions to address shortcomings and inspire reflexivity in transdisciplinary projects.


Journal of Environmental Policy & Planning | 2017

Implementation of the ecosystem services approach in Swedish municipal planning

Per Schubert; Nils Ekelund; Thomas H. Beery; Christine Wamsler; K. Ingemar Jönsson; Andreas Roth; Sanna Stålhammar; Torleif Bramryd; Michael Johansson; Thomas Palo

ABSTRACT While ecosystem-based planning approaches are increasingly promoted through international and national policies, municipalities are still struggling with translating them into practice. Against this background, this paper aims to increase the knowledge of current advances and possible ways to support the implementation of the ecosystem services (ES) approach at the municipal level. More specifically, we analyze how ES have been integrated into comprehensive planning within the municipality of Malmö in Sweden over the last 60 years, a declared forerunner in local environmental governance. Based on a content analysis of comprehensive plans over the period 1956–2014 and interviews with municipal stakeholders, this paper demonstrates how planning has shifted over time toward a more holistic view of ES and their significance for human well-being and urban sustainability. Both explicit and implicit applications of the ES concept were found in the analyzed comprehensive plans and associated programs and projects. Our study shows how these applications reflect international, national, and local policy changes, and indicates how municipalities can gradually integrate the ES approach into comprehensive planning and facilitate the transition from implicit to more explicit knowledge use.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1997

High prevalence of hantavirus antibodies in bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) captured in the vicinity of households afflicted with nephropathia epidemica.

Clas Ahlm; Oleg A. Alexeyev; Fredrik Elgh; Birgitta Aava; Göran Wadell; Arne Tärnvik; Per Juto; Thomas Palo


Ecosystem services | 2016

Perceptions of the ecosystem services concept: Opportunities and challenges in the Swedish municipal context

Thomas H. Beery; Sanna Stålhammar; K. Ingemar Jönsson; Christine Wamsler; Torleif Bramryd; Ebba Brink; Nils Ekelund; Michael Johansson; Thomas Palo; Per Schubert

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K. Ingemar Jönsson

Kristianstad University College

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Thomas H. Beery

Kristianstad University College

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