Veijo Jormalainen
Head of Department (Department of Biology) veijor@utu.fi +358 29 450 4158 +358 40 721 2682 Natura, yliopistonmäki Turku : 335 |
marine biology; plant-herbivore -interactions; behavioral ecology of crustacean mesograzers; community ecology; evolutionary ecology
Human influence on ecosystems is growing with an ever-accelerating speed.
The most important applied aim of ecological research is to understand
biological mechanisms behind and derive predictions on consequences for
biodiversity and ecosystem function. Human influences such as eutrophication
and warming percolate through the network of biotic interactions. Therefore,
knowledge on the structure and function of communities is crucially important.
Natural populations respond to environmental change by either going extinct
locally or adapting locally. Therefore, research on distributional changes need
to be complemented by knowledge on evolutionary potential of the populations,
such as amount of genetic variation, genetic structure, nature of selection and
determinants of gene flow. From this perspective evolutionary ecology manifests
as the principal research field in providing understanding and predictive
potential for global change.
My research focuses on ecology and evolution of intra- and interspecific
interactions in the littoral communities of the Baltic Sea. The Baltic Sea is
an exciting research environment; it is unique owing to the brackish water
nature, archipelagoes and the naturally fragmented littoral zone, and there is
a human population of nearly 90 million living on the catchment and generating an
enormous environmental impact. The unique features reflect to both the
community composition and genetic variation of the species. Although the
monitoring of human impacts has a long history in the Baltic Sea, very little
research on evolutionary potential and evolutionary responses to global changes
has been conducted. There clearly is a both a need and a niche for research
providing understanding on consequences of environmental change in the Baltic
Sea and for planning science based conservation and management actions.
Learning occurs when there is motivation. Therefore the
foremost job of a teacher is to inspire and motivate, spark the desire for
knowledge. On top of that comes the deep and up-to-date knowledge that is the
most valuable property of a university teacher.
Subjective experience boosts digestion of new information,
which highlights the importance of teaching methodologies. In biology,
supportive methods are readily available: field excursions and courses with
hands-on demonstrations, laboratory exercises, research project visits,
computer simulations and personal data collection and analysis.
Lectures are an invaluable method in providing structure,
context and state-of-the-art review for new knowledge. However, they are
insufficient alone. In my own lecturing, I try to include elements supporting
personal learning, e.g. discussion, teamwork and seminars on specific issues
presented by students.
Learning and novel insights are built on facts and past
experience. It is therefore essential to provide the history of ideas,
formulation of hypotheses and their testing and development towards the
conventional wisdom, pointing out gaps and discrepancies. It is pointless to
invent the wheel repeatedly.
Recent courses given:
Community ecology
Aquatic ecology
Ecology and evolution plant-herbivore -interactions
Macrophyte ecology
- Contents of soluble, cell-wall-bound and exuded phlorotannins in the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus, with implications on their ecological functions (2005)
- Journal of Chemical Ecology
- Genotypic variation in tolerance and resistance to fouling in the brown alga Facus vesiculosus (2005)
- Oecologia
- Polar extracts of the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus (L.) reduce assimilation efficiency but do not deter the herbivorous isopod Idotea baltica (Pallas) (2005)
- Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
- Polar extracts of the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus (L.) reduce assimilation efficiency but do not deter the herbivorous isopod Idotea baltica (Pallas) (2005)
- Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
- Responses of growth and phlorotannins in Fucus vesiculosus to nutrient enrichment and herbivory (2005)
- Aquatic Ecology
- Genetic and environmental variation in performance of a marine isopod: effects of eutrophication (2004)
- Oecologia
- Geographic covariation of chemical quality of the host alga Fucus vesiculosus with fitness of the herbivorous isopod Idotea baltica (2004)
- Marine Biology
- Inducible resistance to herbivory in Fucus vesiculosus - duration, spreading and variation with nutrient availability (2004)
- Marine Ecology Progress Series
- Variation in natural selection for growth and phlorotannins in the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus (2004) Jormalainen V, Honkanen T
- Induction of phlorotannin production in a brown alga: defense or resource dynamics? (2003)
- Oikos
- Feeding and growth of the isopod Idotea baltica on the brown alga Fucus vesiculosus: Roles of inter-population and within-plant variation in plant quality (2002)
- Ecoscience -Quebec-
- Nutrient enhancement increases performance of a marine herbivore via quality of its food alga (2002)
- Ecology
- Within-alga integration and compensation: Effects of simulated herbivory on growth and reproduction of the brown alga, Fucus vesiculosus (2002)
- Botanical Bulletin
- Costs of intersexual conflict in the isopod Idotea baltica (2001)
- Journal of Evolutionary Biology
- Feeding preferences and performance of a marine isopod on seaweed hosts: cost of habitat specialization (2001)
- Marine Ecology Progress Series
- Resolution of evolutionary conflicts: costly behaviours enforce the evolution of cost-free competition (2001)
- Evolutionary Ecology Research
- Why does herbivore sex matter? Sexual differences in utilization of Fucus vesiculosus by the isopod Idotea baltica (2001)
- Oikos
- Different roles of feeding and protection in diel microhabitat choice of sexes in Idotea baltica (2000)
- Oecologia
- Dynamics of intersexual conflict over precopulatory mate guarding in two populations of the isopod Idotea baltica (2000)
- Animal Behaviour
- Female reproductive cycle and sexual conflict over precopulatory mate-guarding in Thermosphaeroma (Crustacea, Isopoda) (1999)
- Ethology