The Barents Sea Ecosystem Programme
The overarching objective of this programme is to generate knowledge that will provide a basis for developing advice for the authorities in all areas that concern marine resources and the environment in the Barents Sea.
Recent Submissions
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A minimal Barents Sea ecosystem model from first principles.
(Conference object, 2011) -
Report of the Arctic Fisheries Working Group (AFWG) [28 April - 4 May 2011 Hamburg, Germany]
(ICES CM Documents;2011/ACOM:05, Working paper, 2011) -
Growth of Barents Sea capelin (Mallotus villosus) in relation to zooplankton abundance
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2002)Because capelin feed on zooplankton, the availability of the latter may be a limiting factor for capelin growth in at least some areas and at certain times. It was therefore hypothesized that a relationship exists between ... -
Report of the Working Group on Multispecies Assessment Methods (WGSAM) : 4-8 October 2010 San Sebastian, Spain
(ICES CM Documents;2010/SSGSUE:05, Working paper, 2010-10) -
Hvordan dele hav og fisk
(Chronicle, 2010-05-19) -
Mykje vil ha meir
(Chronicle, 2010-09-22) -
Retrieving the times series of input data for assessment of NEA saithe
(Working paper, 2010-04)This WD is meant as an explanation to how the times series input files for the assessment of NEA saithe is expanded to age 15+ at the 2010 AFWG. Table 3 and 4 includes age group 2. This age group is not used in the current ... -
Some information about CPUE in the Norwegian NEA-saithe trawl fishery
(Working paper, 2010-02) -
Endringar i forvaltningsregelen for NA torsk
(Conference object, 2010-01-19) -
Barents Sea capelin
(Conference object, 2009-05) -
Berekraftig hausting - eller - kvar i næringskjeda bør vi hauste?
(Conference object, 2010-09-03) -
Barents Sea Ecosystem Resilience under global environmental change 2010-2013
(ICES CM Documents;2010/Q:27, Working paper, 2010) -
Cod, haddock, saithe, herring, and capelin in the Barents Sea and adjacent waters: a review of the biological value of the area
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2009-10-09)Cod, haddock, saithe, herring, and capelin are the most important fish species in the Barents Sea and adjacent waters. Ecosystem-based management requires species-specific knowledge of the biological value and vulnerability ... -
NEA saithe XSA runs with different survey tuning series
(Working paper, 2010-02)New tuning series from a combined and improved survey gives lower and more stable S. E. Log q residuals than the tuning series presently used. However, the retrospective trend is still poor and the estimates of F and SSB ... -
Heat in the Barents Sea: transport, storage, and surface fluxes
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2010)A column model is set up for the Barents Sea to explore sensitivity of surface fluxes and heat storage from varying ocean heat transport. Mean monthly ocean transport and atmospheric forcing are synthesised and force the ... -
Biodiversity of and changes related to harvestable fish resources : Part III Biodiversity under change
(Conference object, 2010-01) -
Trophic interactions affecting a key ecosystem component: a multi-stage analysis of the recruitment of the Barents Sea capelin
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2010-08-10)The Barents Sea stock of capelin (Mallotus villosus) has suffered three major collapses (>90% reduction) since 1985 due to recruitment failures. As capelin is a key species in the area, these population collapses have had ... -
Report of the Arctic Fisheries Working Group (AFWG) [21 -27 April 2009 San-Sebastian, Spain]
(ICES CM documents;2009/ACOM:02, Working paper, 2009) -
Report of the Arctic fisheries working group (AFWG) [18-27 April 2007 Vigo, Spain]
(ICES CM documents, Working paper, 2007)