Viser treff 101-120 av 1535

    • Linking extreme seasonality and gene expression in Arctic marine protists 

      Wutkowska, Magdalena; Vader, Anna; Logares, Ramiro; Pelletier, Eric; Gabrielsen, Tove M. (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-09-05)
      At high latitudes, strong seasonal differences in light availability affect marine organisms and regulate the timing of ecosystem processes. Marine protists are key players in Arctic aquatic ecosystems, yet little is known about their ecological roles over yearly cycles. This is especially true for the dark polar night period, which up until recently was assumed to be devoid of biological activity. ...
    • Macrofauna and meiofauna food-web structure from Arctic fjords to deep Arctic Ocean during spring: A stable isotope approach 

      Oleszczuk, Barbara; Silberberger, Marc Jürgen; Grzelak, Katarzyna; Winogradow, Aleksandra; Dybwad, Christine Schumann; Peeken, Ilka; Wiedmann, Ingrid; Kędra, Monika (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-07-13)
      The knowledge on benthic trophic relations is particularly important for understanding the functioning of still pristine and less studied Arctic Ocean ecosystems. This study examines the benthic food-web structure in the European sector of the Arctic Ocean and assesses if and how it differs along depth gradients in the marginal seaice zone during spring. Samples of the sediment organic matter were ...
    • Remote Operation of Marine Robotic Systems and Next-Generation Multi-Purpose Control Rooms 

      Vasilijevic, Antonio; Bremnes, Jens Einar; Ludvigsen, Martin (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-10-08)
      Since 2017, NTNU’s Applied Underwater Robotics Laboratory has been developing an infrastructure for remote marine/subsea operations in Trondheim Fjord. The infrastructure, named the OceanLab subsea node, allows remote experimentation for three groups of assets: seabed infrastructure, surface or subsea vehicles/robots, and assets at remote experimentation sites. To achieve this task, a shoreside ...
    • Long-term herbivore removal experiments reveal how geese and reindeer shape vegetation and ecosystem CO2-fluxes in high-Arctic tundra 

      Petit Bon, Matteo; Hansen, Brage Bremset; Loonen, M. J. J. E; Petraglia, Alessandro; Bråthen, Kari Anne; Böhner, Hanna; Layton-Matthews, Kate; Beard, Karen H.; Le Moullec, Mathilde; Jonsdottir, Ingibjorg Svala; Van der Wal, René (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-09-23)
      1. Given the current rates of climate change, with associated shifts in herbivore population densities, understanding the role of different herbivores in ecosystem functioning is critical for predicting ecosystem responses. Here, we examined how migratory geese and resident, non-migratory reindeer—two dominating yet functionally contrasting herbivores—control vegetation and ecosystem processes in ...
    • Marine Micro- and Macroalgae in the Polar Night 

      Johnsen, Geir; Leu, Eva; Gradinger, Rolf (Chapter; Bokkapittel, 2020)
      Microalgae have unique adaptions including low metabolic activity, utilization of lipid storage, and resting stage formation to survive the Polar Night. Some species are mixotrophic or heterotrophic and do survive periods that are not favorable for photosynthetic (autotrophic) growth, such as the Polar Night. In addi- tion, the autotrophic and mixotrophic species seem to maintain the key components ...
    • An unexpected bird in Honkai: Star Rail and China’s war on sparrows 

      Salvador, Rodrigo Brincalepe (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023)
      In April 2023, the gacha game Honkai: Star Rail was launched, published by miHoYo/HoYoverse, a Chinese company now very famous for its hit game Genshin Impact. The game is a space opera focusing on a group of interstellar adventurers that travels across the universe to eliminate dangerous artifacts known as Stellarons. The player builds their team with a variety of anime-style characters (23 in total ...
    • The global epidemiology of Brucella infections in terrestrial wildlife: A meta-analysis 

      Dadar, Myriam; Shahali, Youcef; Fakhri, Yadolah; Godfroid, Jacques (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2020-06-17)
      Brucellosis is a widespread zoonotic disease with serious consequences on human and animal health. <i>Brucella</i> infections were reported in many terrestrial wild animals, from subtropical and temperate regions to arctic regions. In many areas, the epidemiology of brucellosis in wildlife is closely associated with the occurrence of the disease in livestock. Some wild species may contribute to the ...
    • Retention of ice-associated amphipods: possible consequences for an ice-free Arctic Ocean 

      Berge, Jørgen; Varpe, Øystein; Moline, Mark A.; Wold, A; Renaud, Paul; Daase, Malin; Falk-Petersen, Stig (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2012-09-12)
      Recent studies predict that the Arctic Ocean will have ice-free summers within the next 30 years. This poses a significant challenge for the marine organisms associated with the Arctic sea ice, such as marine mammals and, not least, the iceassociated crustaceans generally considered to spend their entire life on the underside of the Arctic sea ice. Based upon unique samples collected within ...
    • Sea-ice decline could keep zooplankton deeper for longer 

      Flores, Hauke; Veyssière, Gaëlle; Castellani, Giulia; Wilkinson, Jeremy; Hoppmann, Mario; Karcher, Michael; Valcic, Lovro; Cornils, Astrid; Geoffroy, Maxime; Nicolaus, Marcel; Niehoff, Barbara; Priou, Pierre; Schmidt, Katrin; Stroeve, Julienne (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-08-28)
      As Arctic sea ice deteriorates, more light enters the ocean, causing largely unknown effects on the ecosystem. Using an autonomous biophysical observatory, we recorded zooplankton vertical distribution under Arctic sea ice from dusk to dawn of the polar night. Here we show that zooplankton ascend into the under-ice habitat during autumn twilight, following an isolume of 2.4 × 10<sup>−4</sup>  ...
    • The roles of brain lipids and polar metabolites in the hypoxia tolerance of deep-diving pinnipeds 

      Martens, Gerrit A.; Geßner, Cornelia; Folkow, Lars; Creydt, Marina; Fischer, Markus; Burmester, Thorsten (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-04-14)
      Lipids make up more than half of the human brain's dry weight, yet the composition and function of the brain lipidome is not well characterized. Lipids not only provide the structural basis of cell membranes, but also take part in a wide variety of biochemical processes. In neurodegenerative diseases, lipids can facilitate neuroprotection and serve as diagnostic biomarkers. The study of organisms ...
    • Herbivory and warming have opposing short-term effects on plant-community nutrient levels across high-Arctic tundra habitats 

      Petit Bon, Matteo; Bråthen, Kari Anne; Ravolainen, Virve; Ottaviani, Gianluigi; Böhner, Hanna; Jonsdottir, Ingibjørg (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-05-11)
      Environmental changes can rapidly alter standing biomass in tundra plant communities; yet, to what extent can they modify plant-community nutrient levels? Nutrient levels and their changes can affect biomass production, nutrient cycling rates and nutrient availability to herbivores. We examined how environmental perturbations alter Arctic plant-community leaf nutrient concentrations (percentage of ...
    • Ecological Drivers of Mercury Bioaccumulation in Fish of a Subarctic Watercourse 

      Amundsen, Per-Arne; Henriksson, Nina Matilda; Poste, Amanda; Prati, Sebastian; Power, Michael (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-02-02)
      Mercury (Hg) is a serious concern for aquatic ecosystems because it may biomagnify to harmful concentrations within food webs and consequently end up in humans that eat fish. However, the trophic transfer of mercury through the aquatic food web may be impacted by several factors related to network complexity and the ecology of the species present. The present study addresses the interplay between ...
    • First analysis of an Arctic sea ice meiofauna food web based on abundance, biomass and stable isotope ratios 

      Gradinger, Rolf; Bluhm, Bodil (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2020-01-23)
      Particulate organic carbon (POC) produced in sea ice is often included in stable isotopic food web studies of polar seas as a single value of particulate organic matter (POM), i.e. ‘ice POM’. During 10 field trips to landfast ice off Alaska’s north coast, we examined the seasonal contribution of sea ice-associated meiofauna to total POM and the trophic structure within the sea ice using bulk carbon ...
    • Relating polar bears killed, human presence, and ice conditions in Svalbard 1987–2019 

      Vongraven, Dag; Amstrup, S.C.; McDonald, T.L.; Mitchell, J.; Yoccoz, Nigel (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-07-28)
      Conflicts between humans and polar bears have been predicted to increase as polar bear prime habitat, sea ice, is decreasing. In Svalbard, a strict protection and control schemes have secured near complete records of bears killed and found dead since 1987. We analyzed the trend in the number of kills and related this to human visitation to the archipelago. We found a slight decrease in the number ...
    • Foraging movements of humpback whales relate to the lateral and vertical distribution of capelin in the Barents Sea 

      Vogel, Emma; Skalmerud, Emma; Biuw, Martin; Blanchet, Marie-Anne; Kleivane, Lars; Skaret, Georg; Øien, Nils; Rikardsen, Audun (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-08-24)
      Understanding how individual animals modulate their behaviour and movement patterns in response to environmental variability plays a central role in behavioural ecology. Marine mammal tracking studies typically use physical environmental characteristics that vary, and/or proxies of prey distribution, to explain predator movements. Studies linking predator movements and the actual distributions ...
    • Validation of pop-up satellite archival tags (PSATs) on Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) in a Greenland fjord 

      Nielsen, Julius; Estévez-Barcia, Daniel; Post, Søren; Christensen, Helle Torp; Retzel, Anja; Meire, Lorenz; Rigét, Frank; Strøm, John Frederik; Rikardsen, Audun H.; Hedeholm, Rasmus (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-06-28)
      Traditional tagging techniques are simple and cost-effective, but inferences require recaptures and data on movement/migration are limited to a start and end position at unpredictable intervals. Pop-up satellite archival tags (PSATs) offer other opportunities, as they provide positions at pre-programmed times and collect on-route data, which can be used to describe position, behavior, and habitat ...
    • Analyzing the Geometry and Dynamics of Viral Structures: A Review of Computational Approaches Based on Alpha Shape Theory, Normal Mode Analysis, and Poisson–Boltzmann Theories 

      Hsieh, Yin-Chen; Delarue, Marc; Orland, Henri; Koehl, Patrice (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-06-13)
      The current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic highlights our fragility when we are exposed to emergent viruses either directly or through zoonotic diseases. Fortunately, our knowledge of the biology of those viruses is improving. In particular, we have more and more structural information on virions, i.e., the infective form of a virus that includes its genomic material and surrounding protective capsid, and ...
    • Estimating Surface Concentrations of Calanus finmarchicus Using Standardised Satellite-Derived Enhanced RGB Imagery 

      McCarry, Cait L.; Basedow, Sünnje Linnéa; Davies, Emlyn John; McKee, David (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-06-08)
      Calanus finmarchicus is a keystone zooplankton species that is commercially harvested and is critical in sustaining many important fisheries in the North Atlantic. However, due to their patchy population distributions, they are notoriously difficult to map using traditional ship-based techniques. This study involves the use of a combined approach of standardized ocean colour imagery and radiative ...
    • Weak seasonality in benthic food web structure within an Arctic inflow shelf region 

      Ziegler, Amanda; Bluhm, Bodil; Renaud, Paul Eric; Jørgensen, Lis Lindal (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2023-08-23)
      The Arctic Ocean is characterized by pronounced seasonality in the quantity and quality of organic matter exported from the surface ocean. While it is well established that changes in food availability can alter the abundance, biomass and function of benthic organisms, the impact on food web structure is not well studied. We used bulk carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis to assess the quantity ...
    • The One Ocean Expedition: Science and Sailing for the Ocean We Want 

      Huse, Geir; Baussant, Thierry; Becker, Meike; Biuw, Martin; Bødtker, Gunhild; Cook, Jeremy; Gomiero, Alessio; Grøsvik, Bjørn Einar; Handegard, Nils Olav; Hestnes, Arne Johan; Hole, Lars Robert; Husson, Berengere; Jaccard, Pierre Franqois; Johannessen, Johnny Andre; Krolicka, Adriana; Lien, Vidar Surén; Lindemann, Christian; Olsen, Are; Renner, Angelika; Lid, Sjur Ringheim; Steen-Larsen, Hans Christian; Strand, Espen; Westgaard, Jon-Ivar; Pedersen, Geir (Research report; Forskningsrapport, 2023-08-24)
      The One Ocean Expedition (OOE) was a 20-month long circumnavigation of the globe by the Norwegian sail training vessel Statsraad Lehmkuhl, and a recognised part of the UN decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development. The ship was equipped with modern instrumentation to collect high-quality data on ocean physics, chemistry, and biology. Many of the data series were available in near real time ...