13. April 2021 Scientists have developed a new method to map and monitor alien species in the polar regions.
9. April 2021 This study signals the need for fisheries management to account for ecosystem constraints when setting catch limits in periods of low forage fish biomass.
26. March 2021 Reduced availability of key prey forces adult puffins to fly further from their colonies to find food. Meanwhile, their chicks starve at the nests.
18. March 2021 The Scandinavian and Finnish brown bear populations are among the largest in Europe but were until recently separated. A new study by Norwegian, Swedish, and Finnish researchers demonstrates that connectivity has been restored with decent exchange of individuals and genes between countries.
15. March 2021 For more than 20 years researchers have used DNA to gain more knowledge on large carnivores in Norway.
9. February 2021 Using data from five different marine ecosystems, researchers have tested the hypothesis of predator‐pit dynamics for forage fish. By examining the consumption of fish by seabirds and the effect of such predation on fish population dynamics, they found that seabird-induced mortality of forage fish varies with fish abundance.
4. December 2020 More than a quarter of the individual auks in which mercury levels were measured outside the breeding season exceeded the toxicity threshold.
19. November 2020 Offshore oil rigs serve as a breeding refuge for Norwegian Black-legged Kittiwakes. Although they are few in number, these birds produce more chicks than kittiwakes in natural colonies along the coast, to the benefit of the impoverished
4. November 2020 The Circumpolar Seabird Group under CAFF and the Arctic Council has proposed a conservation plan for the black-legged kittiwake Rissa tridactyla, a species which has been declining severely
2. November 2020 Sustainable certification of oil palm plantations can reduce poverty, but the timing of certification is among the factors that influence the effect.
29. September 2020 It is no longer sufficient to protect nature – there is also a need to restore what has been degraded. Ecological restorations are actions to improve the ecological condition and values of an ecosystem that has been degraded, damaged, or destroyed. Mitigation and compensating measures can also be part of restoration.
18. September 2020 Foraging shags and commercial kelp harvesters very often utilize the same marine areas.
14. August 2020 Simple measures can make wind turbines more bird friendly. New research shows that measures such as painting the rotor blades or towers, using UV-light and smart micro-siting of wind turbines, decreases the risk for bird collisions considerably.
26. June 2020 One hundred years ago, the last sea eagle disappeared from Ireland. Now the green island has a new viable eagle population - from Trøndelag!
20. May 2020 Vultures and other avian scavengers characteristically circle the skies, scanning the ground for carcasses. New research has revealed that these birds can, in addition to sight, respond to auditory cues indicative of potential foraging opportunit
16. April 2020 In a world where wild spaces are becoming fewer the central steppes of Kazakhstan uniquely contain hundreds of thousands of square kilometers of grasslands which represent an amazing opportunity for wildlife conservation. However, several of the
2. January 2020 Puffins change their diet while razorbills seek out new foraging areas.
2. September 2019 Migratory animals are actively adjusting their traditions to climate change.
29. May 2019 Developing state-of-the-art statistical tools that combine different sources of data has allowed researchers from Norway and Myanmar to make robust estimates of population size for an often-overlooked population of one of the world’s mo
13. February 2019 A new study reports China’s planting of trees and India’s intensive crop cultivation as the main reasons why the Earth is greening throwing doubt on the role of carbon dioxide fertilization, which climate change skeptics have