Projects per year
Project Details
Description (abstract)
To a close approximation, all animals on Earth are insects – both in terms of species numbers and biomass. To understand why insect communities are structured like they are, we need to understand how strongly different species interact with each other in time and space, how that affects their abundances, and how this is reflected in ecosystem functioning. The Spatial Foodweb Ecology Group focuses on general patterns in insect community structure across multiple sites in space and time, and on how such patterns translate into function. We are particularly interested in how insect food webs are built from first principles: how (meta)populations of multiple species interact, and how species-specific characteristics blend with interspecific interactions in shaping what insects occur where and at what abundances.
Status | Active |
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Effective start/end date | 01/01/2011 → … |
Fields of Science
- 1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology
- 1172 Environmental sciences
- 415 Other agricultural sciences
Projects
- 2 Finished
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A quantitative insect food web for the high Artic
Roslin, T., Wirta, H., Viljanen, H. & Hardwick, B. V. P.
01/01/2011 → 31/12/2014
Project: Research project
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Biodiversiteetin väheneminen ja ekosysteemin toiminta muuttuvissa maisemissa
Roslin, T., Slade, E., Kaartinen, R., Hardwick, B. V. P. & Viljanen, H.
01/01/2011 → 31/12/2014
Project: Research project
Research output
- 1 Article
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Genetic diversity and connectivity shape herbivore load within an oak population at its range limit
Pohjanmies, T., Tack, A. J. M., Pulkkinen, P., Elshibli, S., Vakkari, P. & Roslin, T., Jun 2015, In: Ecosphere. 6, 6, 11 p., 101.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Scientific › peer-review
Open AccessFile