Between 1600 and 1900 two numerous and ecologically important large marine mammals were extirpated in the Svalbard archipelago. These were the pelagic-feeding Greenland whale (Balaena mysticetus) and the benthic-feeding walrus (Odobaenus rosmarus rosmarus), the initial stocks of which prior to exploitation are estimated to have numbered approximately 46 000 and 25 000 animals respectively. Their annual food consumption at that time is estimated to have been some 4 million tons of plankton and 0.4 million tons of benthic organisms. Assuming that the primary and secondary production of the shelf/coastal ecosystem in the 16th century (before the peak of the Little Ice Age) was similar to that of the present day, the authors have concluded that...
During the ARK V /2 expedition of RV Polarstern in the Norwegian and Greenland seas in June 1988, 38...
The Arctic is warming rapidly, with concomitant sea ice losses and ecosystem changes. The animals mo...
The question of whether species assemblages are controlled by food availability or by predators is a...
Between 1600 and 1900 two numerous and ecologically important large marine mammals were extirpated i...
During the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries tens of thousands of Greenland right whales and thousands o...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, tens of thousands of Greenland right whales were killed as a res...
Greenland whales and walruses in the Svalbard food web before and after exploitation
Svalbard in the European Arctic has a well-documented history of natural resource exploitation. Sinc...
At-sea distribution of seabirds and marine mammals was quantitatively determined during the Arctic E...
Three main aspects of the possible impacts of retreating pack ice and changing ice coverage in the E...
In this study, we assess prey consumption by the marine mammal community in the northeast Atlantic [...
Food samples from six High-Arctic seabird species were collected during spring and summer seasons be...
The Norwegian Polar Institute initiated a research programme on white whales in 1995 to gather biolo...
The distribution at sea of upper trophic levels—seabirds and marine mammals—is depending on their fo...
Walruses were brought to the brink of extinction in Svalbard (Norway) during 350 years of unregulate...
During the ARK V /2 expedition of RV Polarstern in the Norwegian and Greenland seas in June 1988, 38...
The Arctic is warming rapidly, with concomitant sea ice losses and ecosystem changes. The animals mo...
The question of whether species assemblages are controlled by food availability or by predators is a...
Between 1600 and 1900 two numerous and ecologically important large marine mammals were extirpated i...
During the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries tens of thousands of Greenland right whales and thousands o...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, tens of thousands of Greenland right whales were killed as a res...
Greenland whales and walruses in the Svalbard food web before and after exploitation
Svalbard in the European Arctic has a well-documented history of natural resource exploitation. Sinc...
At-sea distribution of seabirds and marine mammals was quantitatively determined during the Arctic E...
Three main aspects of the possible impacts of retreating pack ice and changing ice coverage in the E...
In this study, we assess prey consumption by the marine mammal community in the northeast Atlantic [...
Food samples from six High-Arctic seabird species were collected during spring and summer seasons be...
The Norwegian Polar Institute initiated a research programme on white whales in 1995 to gather biolo...
The distribution at sea of upper trophic levels—seabirds and marine mammals—is depending on their fo...
Walruses were brought to the brink of extinction in Svalbard (Norway) during 350 years of unregulate...
During the ARK V /2 expedition of RV Polarstern in the Norwegian and Greenland seas in June 1988, 38...
The Arctic is warming rapidly, with concomitant sea ice losses and ecosystem changes. The animals mo...
The question of whether species assemblages are controlled by food availability or by predators is a...