The terrestrial environment of Signy Island, South Orkney Islands, maritime Antarctic, is undergoing rapid and possibly irreversible change caused by a natural biological agent. During the past decade there has been a dramatic increase in the number of Antarctic fur seals Arctocephalus gazella coming ashore on the island during the short summers. It is not known whether significant numbers of seals were present on the island prior to the initiation of commercial hunting in the early 1820s. The impact that the continuing increase of these seals had made on the island's terrestrial and freshwater environments has been sudden and locally devastating. The fragile cryptogam-dominated vegetation has suffered physical damage from which it may be i...
© Springer-Verlag 2009Commercial sealers exterminated the original fur seal population at Macquarie ...
The cessation of seal harvesting has prompted a recovery of previously decimated fur seal (Arctoceph...
Sub-Antarctic fur seal, Arctocephalus tropicalis, pups were counted on some of the beaches on all fo...
In the 19th and early 20th centuries commercial seal hunting in maritime Antarctica resulted in a h...
International audienceimpacts on land were associated with the marine exploitation industries of sea...
Intensive human exploitation of the Antarctic fur seal (Arctocephalus gazella) in its primary popula...
Sub-Antarctic islands share many similarities in their history of human interaction and impacts befo...
Signy Island has experienced a dramatic increase in fur seal numbers over recent decades, which has ...
The number of Antarctic fur seals Arctocephalus gazella hauled out at Signy Island in the South Orkn...
Sub-Antarctic islands are some of the rarest ecosystems on the planet and therefore are highly signi...
The population trend over the last decade for subantarctic fur seals (Arctocephalus tropicalis) on A...
The main changes in the distribution and abundance of marine top predators in the Antarctic in the l...
Understanding divergent biological responses to climate change is important for predicting ecosystem...
Commercial sealers exterminated the original fur seal population at Macquarie Island in the early 18...
Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are unique natural laboratories where organisms adapted to extreme...
© Springer-Verlag 2009Commercial sealers exterminated the original fur seal population at Macquarie ...
The cessation of seal harvesting has prompted a recovery of previously decimated fur seal (Arctoceph...
Sub-Antarctic fur seal, Arctocephalus tropicalis, pups were counted on some of the beaches on all fo...
In the 19th and early 20th centuries commercial seal hunting in maritime Antarctica resulted in a h...
International audienceimpacts on land were associated with the marine exploitation industries of sea...
Intensive human exploitation of the Antarctic fur seal (Arctocephalus gazella) in its primary popula...
Sub-Antarctic islands share many similarities in their history of human interaction and impacts befo...
Signy Island has experienced a dramatic increase in fur seal numbers over recent decades, which has ...
The number of Antarctic fur seals Arctocephalus gazella hauled out at Signy Island in the South Orkn...
Sub-Antarctic islands are some of the rarest ecosystems on the planet and therefore are highly signi...
The population trend over the last decade for subantarctic fur seals (Arctocephalus tropicalis) on A...
The main changes in the distribution and abundance of marine top predators in the Antarctic in the l...
Understanding divergent biological responses to climate change is important for predicting ecosystem...
Commercial sealers exterminated the original fur seal population at Macquarie Island in the early 18...
Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are unique natural laboratories where organisms adapted to extreme...
© Springer-Verlag 2009Commercial sealers exterminated the original fur seal population at Macquarie ...
The cessation of seal harvesting has prompted a recovery of previously decimated fur seal (Arctoceph...
Sub-Antarctic fur seal, Arctocephalus tropicalis, pups were counted on some of the beaches on all fo...