Erkki Korpimäki
ekorpi@utu.fi Vesilinnantie 5 Turku : 212 |
Ecology, Evolution
A total of 284 articles published in international scientific journals with
referee practice and 1 scientific monograph during 1978-2018, as well as 27 Ph.D. theses
supervised during 1993-2018 (see https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Erkki_Korpimaeki
for more complete list of publications). Most of these papers have been
published in high-quality international natural science, ecology and behavioural
ecology journals, including Nature (3 papers in 1993-2018), Trends Ecol. Evol.
(3), Biol. Reviews (2), Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B (12), BioScience (2), Global
Change Biol. (2), PLoS one (6), Ecol. Monogr. (2), Ecology (9), J. Anim. Ecol.
(14), Oikos (34), Oecologia (20), Ecol. Letters (1), Ecography (5), Methods in
Ecol. Evol. (1), Biol. Cons. (2), Ecoscience (7), Funct. Ecol. (2), Evol. Ecol.
(5), Evol. Ecol. Res. (1), Behav. Ecol. (3), Anim. Behav. (5), and Behav. Ecol.
Sociobiol. (8). These papers are also highly cited: a total of >11500 citations
in Web of Sci. during 1984-2018 (h-index 62).
Our team does research in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. Our current project is on population dynamics, reproductive success, dispersal and survival of avian predators in relation to habitat change (e.g. forest loss and intensification of agricultural practices) and climate change in northern ecosystems.
There is a pressing need to understand how changing climate interacts with land-use change to affect predator-prey interactions in fragmented landscapes. This is particularly true in boreal ecosystems facing fast climate change and intensification in forestry practices. We investigate the relative influence of climate changes and habitat loss and degradation on the food storing behaviour, body condition, over-winter survival, reproductive success and costs of reproduction of a generalist predator in boreal forest. Our model species is the pygmy owl, and its main food resources, small rodents and birds. We have collected a unique dataset of >20 000 prey items accumulated in larders of pygmy owls in autumns during 2002-2018.
- 2010
- Evolutionary Ecology Research
- Predator manipulation experiments: impacts on populations of terrestrial vertebrate prey (2010)
- Ecological Monographs
- (2010)
- OikosOecologia
- (2007)
- Acta OecologicaOikos
- Predator-induced synchrony in population oscillations of coexisting small mammal species (2005) Korpimaki E, Norrdahl K, Huitu O, Klemola T
- Spatial synchrony in vole population fluctuations - a field experiment (2005)
- Oikos
- Survival through bottlenecks of vole cycles: Refuge or chance events? (2005)
- Evolutionary EcologyEcography
- Vole cycles and predation in temperate and boreal zones of Europe (2005)
- Journal of Animal Ecology
- Competition, predation and interspecific synchrony in cyclic small mammal communities (2004)
- Ecography
- Dynamic impacts of feral mink predation on vole metapopulations in the outer archipelago of the Baltic Sea (2004)
- Oikos
- Predator-induced changes in population structure and individual quality of Microtus voles: a large-scale field experiment (2004)
- Oikos
- Landscape effects on temporal and spatial properties of vole population fluctuations (2003)
- Oecologia
- Winter food supply limits growth of northern vole populations in the absence of predation (2003)
- Ecology
- Changes in individual quality during a 3-year population cycle of voles (2002)
- Changes in population structure and reproduction during a 3-year population cycle of voles. (vol 96, pg 331, 2002) (2002)
- Changes in population structure and reproduction during a 3-yr population cycle of voles (2002)
- Oikos
- Dynamic effects of predators on cyclic voles: field experimentation and model extrapolation (2002)
- Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
- Mobility decisions and the predation risks of reintroduction (2002)
- Biological Conservation
- Seasonal changes in the numerical responses of predators to cyclic vole populations (2002)
- Strong seasonality may attenuate trophic cascades: vertebrate predator exclusion in boreal grassland (2002)
- Oikos