Photo: Atle Staalesen

«Dramatic for Barents ecosystems»

One of the world’s most comprehensive marine research expeditions reveals powerful change in the marine life of the Barents Sea.
October 04, 2018

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«It is both surprising and dramatic that we are making these findings», says Georg Skaret. He is researcher at the Norwegian Marine Research Institute and has taken part in this year’s major ecosystem mapping in the Barents Sea.

For more than a month, four vessels - three Norwegian and one Russian, have criss-crossed the far northern waters and made a wide range of measurements. It is part of a big annual effort made in cooperation with Russian researchers since year 2004.

«We have been doing this for only 14 years, but we see major changes,» Skaret says as research vessel «Johan Hjort» arrives in Kirkenes, Norway, after weeks at sea.

«The Barents Sea is about to become far less Arctic,» the researcher says, and explains that ice volumes in the region in 2018 reached another record-low.

 

Georg Skaret is researcher at the Norwegian Marine Research Institute. Photo: Atle Staalesen

 

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The waters in the Barents Sea are quickly getting warmer, and the species that traditionally have inhabited the region are moving north, while more southern species move in.

We can for example see it with the polar cod, Skaret says. This fish was previously was found over major parts of the Barents Sea, but is now getting increasingly rare. It is today pushed northwards, along the polar ice edge.

The comprehensive Barents ecosystem mapping include research measurements on several hundred predefined points all over the Barents Sea, from the coastal waters along Finnmark and the Kola Peninsula to the ice edge up to 80 degrees north. While the «Johan Hjort» and the two other Norwegian vessels engage on the Norwegian side of the region, the Russian vessel «Vilnyus» take the Russian waters.

 

Representatives of the Marine Research Institute on board vessel “Johan Hjort”. Photo: Atle Staalesen

 

The measurements include a big number of marine species, from the bottom to the top of the sea. In addition, water samples and sediment tests are taken. Also pollution tests are made, and for the first time the expedition includes mapping of micro-plastic.

Onboard the Norwegian vessels are Russian researcher representatives and cooperation is smooth, the expedition members say. Representatives from both countries will now bring their new data to a joint meeting where findings will be discussed and recommendations for quotas elaborated. Those recommendations will subsequently be discussed at the Joint Norwegian-Russian Fishery Commission, the key annual fisheries meeting between the two countries.

Last year, the findings of the researchers were instrumental for the reopening of catch on capelin, the species that for years had been on a historical low. The capelin boost resulted in catch quotas of 200,000 tons in 2017. Also this year, the capelin stocks look good, at least in certain regions, Georg Skaret makes clear.

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