S
Samuli Korpinen
Researcher at Finnish Environment Institute
Publications - 49
Citations - 1792
Samuli Korpinen is an academic researcher from Finnish Environment Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Marine Strategy Framework Directive & Marine ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 47 publications receiving 1500 citations. Previous affiliations of Samuli Korpinen include Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe & Sykes Enterprises.
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Hazardous substances in the Baltic Sea: An integrated thematic assessment of hazardous substances in the Baltic Sea
Samuli Korpinen,Maria Laamanen,Jesper H. Andersen,Lillemor Asplund,Urs Berger,Anders Bignert,Elin Boalt,Katja Broeg,Anna Brzozowska,Ingemar Cato,Mikhail Durkin,Galina Garnaga,Kim Gustavson,Michael Haarich,Britta Hedlund,Petriina Köngäs,Thomas Lang,Martin M. Larsen,Kari K. Lehtonen,Jaakko Mannio,Jukka Mehtonen,Ciarán Murray,Sven Poul Nielsen,Bo Nyström,Ksenia Pazdro,Petra Ringeltaube,Doris Schiedek,Rolf Schneider,Monika Stankiewicz,Jakob Strand,Brita Sundelin,Martin Söderström,Henry Vallius,Paula Vanninen,Matti Verta,Niina Vieno,Pekka J. Vuorinen,Andre Zahharov +37 more
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Overview of Integrative Assessment of Marine Systems: The Ecosystem Approach in Practice
Ángel Borja,Michael Elliott,Jesper H. Andersen,Torsten Berg,Jacob Carstensen,Benjamin S. Halpern,Benjamin S. Halpern,Anna-Stiina Heiskanen,Samuli Korpinen,Julia S. Stewart Lowndes,Georg Martin,Naiara Rodríguez-Ezpeleta +11 more
TL;DR: Five existing methods that address the needs of monitoring and assessment of marine ecosystems are reviewed, highlighting their main characteristics and analyzing their commonalities and differences.
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Human pressures and their potential impact on the Baltic Sea ecosystem
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report the first attempt to quantify the magnitude and distribution of cumulative impacts of anthropogenic pressures for an entire regional sea, the Baltic Sea, and show that the highest estimated impacts were in the southern and southwestern sea areas and in the Gulf of Finland.
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Ecosystem consequences of cyanobacteria in the northern Baltic Sea.
Miina Karjalainen,Jonna Engström-Öst,Samuli Korpinen,Heikki Peltonen,Jari-Pekka Pääkkönen,Sanna Rönkkönen,Sanna Suikkanen,Markku Viitasalo +7 more
TL;DR: The observed effects are very variable, because many crustaceans are tolerant to nodularin and because cyanobacteria may complement the diet of grazers in small amounts, and changes in the structure and functioning of the Baltic Sea communities and ecosystems are likely to occur during the cyanobacterial bloom season.
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Effects of nutrients, herbivory, and depth on the macroalgal community in the rocky sublittoral.
TL;DR: It is concluded that grazers are able to reduce macroalgae over a large range of nutrient availabilities, up to 12-fold nutrient enrichment in the current experiment, and that the sublittoral depth gradient generates variation in the algal community control exerted by both herbivory and nutrient availability.