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Jukuri
Tervetuloa käyttämään Jukuria, Luonnonvarakeskuksen (Luke) avointa julkaisuarkistoa. Jukurissa on tiedot Luken julkaisutuotannosta. Osa julkaisuista on vapaasti ladattavissa. Luken muodostaneiden tutkimuslaitosten aikaisemmasta julkaisutuotannosta osan tiedot ovat järjestelmässä jo nyt ja kattavuus paranee jatkuvasti.
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Viimeksi tallennetut
- Latitude, habitat and reproductive outcome shape breeding space use in common redshanks : First insights from GPS tracking across European landscapesAllain, Jimmy; Monnet, Anne-Christine; Jiguet, Frédéric; Deschamps, Julie; Piha, Markus; Seimola, Tuomas; Procházka, Petr; Rey, Fanny; Rousseau, Pierre; Jomat, Loic; Lemke, Hilger; Obracay, Thorsten; Belting, Heinrich; Belo, João; Schwemmer, Philipp; Tijsen, Wim; Bocher, Pierrick
Global Ecology and Conservation (Elsevier, 2026)The degradation and loss of breeding habitats due to agricultural intensification is driving severe declines in European bird populations. Understanding how breeding phenology and habitat use vary across a species’ breeding distribution is essential for effective conservation. Here, we investigate how phenology and space use vary across latitude and habitat types of the common redshank (Tringa totanus) with breeding sites distributed across Europe, encompassing coastal, bog and agricultural landscapes. We used high-resolution GPS telemetry to track 85 adult redshanks throughout the breeding season. We quantified timing of reproductive stages, local movement behaviour, home-range size and habitat use during incubation and chick-rearing, and assessed how these parameters varied with latitude, habitat type and reproductive outcome. Spring arrival dates were strongly structured by latitude, whereas post-breeding departure was more closely linked to reproductive outcome. Later-arriving individuals exhibited flexible adjustment of breeding schedules across sites by shortening the pre-laying phase. Departure timing depended on reproductive outcome, with similar post-failure departure of both sexes but prolonged male residency following successful hatching, which is consistent with sex-specific parental roles. Space use varied markedly among sites and was strongly driven by dominant habitat type. In coastal systems, mudflats were heavily used throughout the breeding cycle, whereas bog-breeding redshanks increasingly used bog habitats during brooding, reflecting favourable conditions for chick development. Redshanks breeding in grassland make significant use of agricultural areas benefiting from conservation measures. Our results reveal behavioural flexibility in reproductive phenology and habitat use across the European breeding range of the redshank, allowing us to identify phases sensitive to disturbance in different populations. Agricultural habitats can be suitable, but birds seem to use mainly grasslands under protection measures, highlighting the importance of the implementation of AES (Agri-environment Schemes) and cooperation with farmers for the conservation of shorebirds. - Integrating field, mesocosms, and laboratory approaches to characterise denitrification-driven nitrous oxide hot moments in European wetlandsCrestey-Chury, Thomas; Darnajoux, Romain; Sauvage, Sabine; Aurela, Mika; Camboulive, Thierry; Carles, Noémie; De Dobbelaer, Tom; Escarmena, Laura; Gandois, Laure; Jauhiainen, Jyrki; Juutinen, Sari; Larmola, Tuula; Mander, Ülo; Poblador, Sílvia; Raman, Maud; Sabater, Francesc; Schindler, Thomas; Soosaar, Kaido; Ukonmaanaho, Liisa; Sánchez-Pérez, José-Miguel
Biogeochemistry (Springer Nature, 2026) - Priority research questions in global peatland scienceMilner, Alice M.; McKeown, Michelle M.; Ruwaimana, Monika; Gallego-Sala, Angela; Loisel, Julie; Menges, Johanna; Roland, Thomas P.; Ahiable, Crystal A. E.; Akwany, Leonard O.; Alarcon-Prado, Paola; Anshari, Gusti; Alappat, Linto; Baird, Andy J.; Bąk, Mariusz; Bambuta Boole, Jean Jacques; Batten, Stephanie E.; Beaudoin, Yannick; Bechtold, Michel; Bu, Zhao-Jun; Budisusanti, Sri Parwati Murwani; Benavides, Juan C.; Chawchai, Sakonvan; Chimner, Rodney A.; Cobb, Alexander R.; Cole, Lydia E. S.; Connolly, John; Calvo Vargas, Janet Coral; Courtney-Mustaphi, Colin J.; Davidson, Scott J.; de la Peña, Angeles; Duley, Emma; Elshehawi, Samer; Espinoza León, Ingrid; Finkelstein, Sarah A.; Garneau, Michelle; Girkin, Nicholas T.; Glen, Erin; Grover, Samantha; Grundling, Piet-Louis; Handley, Josephine N.; Helfter, Carole; Hergoualc’h, Kristell; Hoyt, Alison M.; Huang, Xianyu; Imani, Gerard; James, Alexander; Kabonyi Nzabandora, Chantal; Kagaba Kairumba, Carol; Kansiime, Frank; Kolka, Randall K.; Koren, Gerbrand; Korhola, Atte; Krisnawati, Haruni; Kumar, Ritesh; Lamentowicz, Mariusz; Lång, Kristiina; Larmola, Tuula; Lewis, Simon L.; Lopez, Omar R.; López-Blanco, Efrén; Lupascu, Massimo; Maldonado-Fonken, Mónica; Marchant, Robert; Marcisz, Katarzyna; Mazei, Natalia G.; Mazei, Yuri A.; Mbasi, Michel; Melling, Lulie; Miles, Lera; Montanarella, Luca; Moss, Patrick T.; Murgía-Flores, Fabiola; NGuyen, Minh-Ky; Novita, Nisa; Oliver, Dylan J. S.; Orijemie, Emuobosa Akpo; Osaki, Mitsuru; ..., et al.; Rochefort, Line; Saavedra, Bárbara; Samuel, Japheth; Scheel, Patrick; Schutten, Hans; Siegert, Florian; Signori-Müller, Caroline; Strack, Maria; Stolle, Fred; Swindles, Graeme T.; Tanneberger, Franziska; Turetsky, Merritt R.; Urciuolo, Adriana B.; Väliranta, Minna; Verstraeten, Gert; Warren, Matthew; Webster, Kara L.; Whinam, Jennie; Young, Dylan M.; Yu, Zicheng; Zhang, Hui
Communications earth & environment : 1 (Springer Nature, 2026)Peatlands are among Earth’s largest terrestrial carbon stores and are crucial for climate regulation, biodiversity conservation, and water security. Yet peatlands worldwide are deteriorating under pressures from climate change and human disturbance. Strategic, globally coordinated research is urgently needed to protect, restore and manage peatlands so they can continue to deliver essential ecosystem services. To meet this challenge, here we present a global research prioritisation for peatland science, based on a two-stage online survey and expert voting exercise involving 467 participants from 54 countries. We identify 50 priority research questions spanning carbon dynamics, climate impacts, restoration and management, technological innovation, and community and policy engagement. These questions provide a community-informed agenda to guide peatland research over the next decade. Addressing them will help close critical knowledge gaps, strengthen evidence-based decision making, and support the role of peatlands in achieving global climate and biodiversity goals. - Depth-resolved carbon dioxide and methane concentrations in 522 lakes, ponds, and reservoirs worldwideRabaey, Joseph S.; Lewis, Abigail S. L.; Attermeyer, Katrin; Aurich, Patrick; Bansal, Sheel; Bartosiewicz, Maciej; Bertolet, Brittni L.; Bussmann, Ingeborg; Cadieux, Sarah B.; Calamita, Elisa; Capelli, Camilla; Carey, Cayelan C.; Cillero, Carmen; Clayer, Francois; D’Ambrosio, Sofia L.; Davidson, Thomas A.; Deemer, Bridget R.; Denfeld, Blaize A.; Eckert, Werner; Esposito, Chiara; Ford, Phillip; Gorsky, Adrianna; Griffiths, Natalie A.; Grossart, Hans-Peter F.; Hamilton, David P.; Holgerson, Meredith A.; Huser, Brian J.; Iwata, Tomoya; Jansen, Joachim; Jones, Stuart E.; Juutinen, Sari; Kortelainen, Pirkko; Koschorreck, Matthias; Kragh, Theis; Laas, Alo; Larmola, Tuula; Läubli, Saskia; Laurion, Isabelle; Lehmann, Moritz F.; Liu, Liu; Martikainen, Pertti J.; Matoušů, Anna; McCord, Stephen A.; Montes-Pérez, Jorge J.; Nizzoli, Daniele; Ordóñez, César; Peacock, Mike; Pilla, Rachel M.; Prėskienis, Vilmantas; Pu, Junbing; Riis, Tenna; Saarela, Taija; Santoso, Arianto B.; Schubert, Carsten J.; Sepulveda-Jauregui, Armando; Sherman, Bradford S.; Sø, Jonas S.; Stenehjem, Katherine J.; Strock, Kristin E. D.; Tsuchiya, Kenji; Wendt-Potthoff, Katrin; Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A.; Znachor, Petr; Zopfi, Jakob
Scientific data : 1 (Springer Nature, 2026)Lakes, ponds, and reservoirs (hereafter: “lakes”) are important sources of the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4). Emissions of CO2 and CH4 from lakes are regulated in part by in-lake processes, including the production and storage of gases in the lower parts of the water column (bottom waters). However, while substantial efforts have been made to improve estimates of greenhouse gas emissions from lakes, limited data on gas concentrations along depth profiles have prevented the incorporation of bottom-water processes in global emission estimates. Here, we present GHG-depths: the largest existing dataset of depth-profile CO2 and CH4 measurements worldwide, including 522 lakes across 38 countries and all seven continents. These data include contributions from 45 research teams and 56 published studies, totaling 2558 discrete sampling events. As global change continues to alter biogeochemical cycling in lakes, these data can help improve mechanistic models to better predict greenhouse gas production and emission from lakes worldwide. - Työkalu uusien liiketoimintamahdollisuuksien kokonaiskestävyyden arviointiin - Business Model Canvas -sovellus urbaanin ruoantuotannon liiketoimintakonsepteilleRikkonen, Pasi; Karikallio, Hanna-Maija
Luke Tietokortti (Luonnonvarakeskus, 2026)Business Model Canvas -mallia sovelletaan tässä laajennettuna versiona, ns. Sustainable Business Model Canvas, jossa kestävyyden ulottuvuudet integroidaan osaksi liiketoimintamallin perinteistä tarkastelua. Työkalussa sovelletaan kestävyyden arviointia urbaanin ruorantuotannon innovointihankekontekstiin sopivaksi. Malli on räätälöity erityisesti startup- ja pienyritysten tarpeisiin, joissa kehittämisen resurssit ovat usein rajalliset ja liiketoiminta vielä kehittyvässä vaiheessa. Työkalu tukee samalla sekä liiketoiminnan kehittämistä että sen kokonaiskestävyyden arviointia.
