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General background description of the ecosystem

BarentsPortal

The Joint Norwegian-Russian Environmental Status Report for the Barents Sea

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General background description of the ecosystem

Overview of the ecosystem

Overview of the ecosystem

The Barents Sea is a sub-Arctic ecosystem located between 70 and 80ºN. It connects with the Norwegian Sea to the west and the Arctic Ocean to the north. The average depth is 230 m and the maximum depth is approximately 500 m at the western entrance. The general pattern of circulation (Figure 2.1.1) is strongly influenced by this topography, and is characterised by inflow of relatively warm Atlantic water, and coastal water from the west. This current divides into two branches: 1) a southern branch that flows parallel to the coast and eastwards towards Novaya Zemlya; and 2) a northern branch that flows into the Hopen Trench. The Coastal Water has more fresh-water runoff and a lower salinity than the Atlantic water; it also has a stronger seasonal temperature signal. In the northern region of the Barents Sea, fresh and cold Arctic waters flow from northeast to southwest. Atlantic and Arctic water masses are separated by the Polar Front, which is characterised by strong gradients in both temperature and salinity. There is large inter-annual variability in ocean climate related to variable strength of the Atlantic water inflow, and exchange of cold Arctic water. Thus, seasonal variations in hydrographic conditions can be quite large.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 January 2010 15:33 )

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Geographical description

Geographical description

The Barents Sea is on the continental shelf surrounding the Arctic Ocean. It connects with the Norwegian Sea to the west and the Arctic Ocean to the north. Its contours are delineated by the continental slope between Norway and Spitsbergen to the west, the top of the continental slope towards the Arctic Ocean to the north, Novaya Zemlya archipelago to the east, and the coasts of both Norway and Ru...

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 05 January 2010 15:31 )

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Meteorological conditions

Meteorological conditions

Atmospheric forcing exerts influence on marine ecosystems through winds and air-sea interactions. Variations in large-scale atmospheric circulation cause changes in upper ocean circulation, ice extent, and hydrographic properties of the water column. Changes in marine environments in turn cause biological responses such as timing of spring phytoplankton bloom, zooplankton production, patterns of f...

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 24 February 2010 13:19 )

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Bacteria and viruses

Bacteria and viruses

In the biogeochefmical cycles of the ocean, a multitude of processes are catalyzed by Bacteria and Archaea, and the fufnctioning of these cycles in the Barents sea do not differ qualitatively from those at lower latitudes. The carbon cycle may well serve as an example of the biogeochemical cycles (Figure 2.4.1). The heterotrophic procaryotes, denoted bacteria for simplicity, are the major degrader...

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 03 February 2010 10:20 )

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Human activities (introduction)

Human activities (introduction)The aim of this chapter, is to give a background description of the different human activities as they are generally performed in the Barents Sea. The general impact that these activities have on the ecosystem will be dealt with in a later chapter Human impact and is thus not discussed with here.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 11 February 2010 12:13 )

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Ecosystem interaction (Introduction)

To understand the overall dynamics of an ecosystem and the way it is affected by human activities, it is important to consider both the impact of natural environmental variations and multispecies interactions. This chapter therefore starts ( Abiotic impact ) with a description of effects from environmental variation on the biological groups described earlier in chapter Biotic components . It then goes...

Last Updated ( Monday, 18 October 2010 11:13 )

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Oceanographic conditions - General circulation

The Norwegian Atlantic Current carries warm and salty Atlantic water northwards along the Norwegian continental shelf break outside the Norwegian Coastal Current (Figure 2.1.1). When entering the Barents Sea it splits into two main branches. The first branch flows northeast along the Hopen Trench. The second branch flows eastward parallel to the coastal current towards Novaya Zemlya archipelago; t...

Last Updated ( Friday, 22 January 2010 11:32 )

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Phytoplankton

Phytoplankton

As the main primary producer, phytoplankton is an important link between the physical and chemical elements and higher tropic levels in the marine food web. Changes in the environment could affect the annual succession and species composition of the phytoplankton, as well as the overall primary production in the area. Phytoplankton monitoring will give important information regarding biological ch...

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 06 January 2010 10:59 )

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Human activities - Fisheries and other harvesting

Human activities - Fisheries and other harvesting

Fishing is the largest human impact to the fish stocks in the Barents Sea, and thereby the functioning of the whole ecosystem. However, the observed variation in both fish species and ecosystem is also impacted by other effects such as climate and predation (see chapter Predation by mammals).

Last Updated ( Thursday, 11 February 2010 12:12 )

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About BarentsPortal

Polar bears partying on a dead whale carcass. Photo NPI

The BarnetsPortal is a combined web site. It consist of two main elements; presentation of the Joint Norwegian-Russian environmental status report and the Map service. The Report will be updated at regular intervals - initially started with data from 2008. The Map service will continually publish environmental theme data as they become available. Read more...

Status Report. The authors

Puffins in the Barents Sea. Photo NP 

More than 100 experts from a total of 9 Russian and 20 Norwegian institutions have participated in the preparation of the report, and the work has been organized in 13 expert groups. The work has been led by Sevmorgeo and PINRO on Russian side and on Norwegian side by the Institute of Marine Research and the Norwegian Polar Institute..

Find author name here...

Sponsors

The BarentsPortal is a project implemented under the Joint Norwegian-Russian Commission on Environmental Protection. The Portal is a joint Norwegian - Russian instrument designed for the mutual exchange and presentation of information and environmental data relevant to the management of the Barents Sea. It is intended to serve as the future tool for updating of the recently published Norwegian - Russian environmental status report (published here), and for further cooperation on ecosystem-based management of the Barents Sea. 
Ministry of the Environment
Ministry of Natural Resourses of the Russian Federation

The Russian - Norwegian cooperation

Waving kelp at the Norwegian coast. Photo IMR

BarentsPortal is a project developed under the Joint Russian - Norwegian Commission on Environmental Cooperation. The joint environmental report is a co-operation project between the Joint Russian - Norwegian Commission on Environmental Cooperation and the Joint Russian-Norwegian Fisheries Commission

Read about Joint Russian - Norwegian Commission on Environmental Cooperation (unfortunately only in Norwegian - please use web based translation)

Read about the Joint Russian-Norwegian Fisheries Commission

Recommended reading

 

General description of the Barents Sea ecosystem

The Barents Sea is a sub-Arctic shelf ecosystem located between 70° and 80°N. It connect...

 

Current status of the ecosystem

 

Aspects of future change

The following aspects of possible long-term changes in the ecosystem are discussed in the ...

 

Issues relevant for ecosystem management

The following themes are highlighted as examples of issues that are relevant for developme...

 

Future needs for monitoring and integrated status reports

The expected increases in the number and type of impacts on the ecosystem put a premium on...

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