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Gunilla Rosenqvist

Gunilla Rosenqvist

D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
35
Citations
5212
World Ranking
7340
National Ranking
185

Overview

Gunilla Rosenqvist is affiliated with Uppsala University in Sweden. Their research primarily spans the fields of Earth and Planetary Sciences and Environmental Science. Within these, they have contributed to subfields including Oceanography, Earth-Surface Processes, Environmental Chemistry, Pollution, and Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics.

The research topics covered by Gunilla Rosenqvist include:

  • Coastal and Marine Dynamics
  • Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
  • Oil Spill Detection and Mitigation
  • Plant and animal studies
  • Climate Change Communication and Perception
  • Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
  • Marine and coastal plant biology

Their publications have appeared in several journals, most notably:

  • AMBIO
  • Behavioral Ecology
  • Ecology and Evolution

Recent publications include the following:

  • "Methane emissions from macrophyte beach wrack on Baltic seashores" (2022) published in AMBIO
  • "Obituary: Staffan Ulfstrand" (2024) published in Behavioral Ecology
  • "Submersed Aquatic Vegetation Enhances Density and Diversity of Epifaunal Invertebrates Compared to Filamentous Mats in the Central Baltic Sea" (2025) published in Ecology and Evolution

Frequent collaborators in their research include:

  • Mats Björk
  • Fredrïk Gröndahl
  • Stefano Bonaglia
  • Ingrid Ahnesjö
  • Charlotta Kvarnemo

Best Publications

  • Mate choice, fecundity and sexual dimorphism in two pipefish species (Syngnathidae)

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Ingrid Svensson

  • Pipefishes and seahorses: Are they all sex role reversed?

    Amanda Vincent;Ingrid Ahnesjö;Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist

  • Animal signals : signalling and signal design in animal communication

    Yngve Espmark;Trond Amundsen;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Kongelige Norske videnskabers selskab

  • Reversed sex-roles and parental energy investment in zygotes of two pipefish (Syngnathidae) species

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Ingrid Svensson

  • REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS OF FEMALES LIMITED BY MALES IN TWO PIPEFISH SPECIES

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Ingrid Svensson

  • Ornaments or offspring: costs to reproductive success restrict sexual selection processes

    Susan Fitzpatrick;Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist

  • Sex Role Reversal in Pipefish

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist

  • Male mate choice and female-female competition for mates in the pipefish Nerophis ophidion

    Gunilla Rosenqvist

  • The Bateman gradient and the cause of sexual selection in a sex–role–reversed pipefish

    Adam G. Jones;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Anders Berglund;Stevan J. Arnold

  • On the relationship between ontogenetic and static allometry.

    Christophe Pelabon;Geir Hysing Bolstad;Camilla Kalvatn Egset;James M. Cheverud

  • Selective males and ardent females in pipefishes

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist

  • The genetic mating system of a sex-role-reversed pipefish (Syngnathus typhle): a molecular inquiry

    Adam G. Jones;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Anders Berglund;John C. Avise

  • Multiple matings and paternal brood care in the pipefish Syngnathus typhle

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Ingrid Svensson

  • Ornamentation predicts reproductive success in female pipefish.

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Patricia Bernet

  • Male limitation of female reproductive success in a pipefish: effects of body-size differences

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist

  • Male avoidance of parasitized females explained by direct benefits in a pipefish

    Gunilla Rosenqvist;Kerstin Johansson

  • Male pipefish prefer ornamented females

    Anders Berglund;Gunilla Rosenqvist

  • The Measurement of Sexual Selection Using Bateman's Principles: An Experimental Test in the Sex-Role-Reversed Pipefish Syngnathus typhle.

    Adam G. Jones;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Anders Berglund;John C. Avise

  • Artificial selection on allometry: change in elevation but not slope.

    C. K. Egset;T. F. Hansen;A. Le Rouzic;G. H. Bolstad

  • Male and female mate choice affects offspring quality in a sex-role-reversed pipefish.

    Maria Sandvik;Gunilla Rosenqvist;Anders Berglund

  • Prior exposure to male phenotypes influences mate choice in the guppy, Poecilia reticulata

    Gunilla Rosenqvist;Anne Houde

Frequent Co-Authors

Adam Jones
Adam Jones University of Idaho
John C. Avise
John C. Avise University of California, Irvine
Ian A. Fleming
Ian A. Fleming Memorial University of Newfoundland
Bjørn Munro Jenssen
Bjørn Munro Jenssen Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Jonathan M. Wilson
Jonathan M. Wilson Wilfrid Laurier University
Charlotta Kvarnemo
Charlotta Kvarnemo University of Gothenburg
Trond Amundsen
Trond Amundsen Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Amanda C. J. Vincent
Amanda C. J. Vincent University of British Columbia
Ivar Folstad
Ivar Folstad University of Tromsø - The Arctic University of Norway
James M. Cheverud
James M. Cheverud Loyola University Chicago

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