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CALANUS GLACIALIS, A KEY ORGANISM IN ARCTIC SHELF SEAS

Stig Falk-Petersen1, Jnrge Berge2, Ketil Eiane3, Eva Leu1 and Janne Snreide2

1Norwegian Polar Institute, 9296 Tromso, Norway 2The University Centre in Svalbard, P.O.

Box 156, N-9171 Longyearbyen, Norway 3Bodo University College, 8049, Bodo, Norway

The Arctic shelf seas and the marginal Ice Zone are regions of major importance for biogenic production in high latitudes. Blooms of algae occur through the Arctic oceans during spring, summer and autumn, associated with sea ice during the ice algal bloom as early as March -April, and in open waters as a phytoplankton blooms as soon as the leads forms in the icepack and along the receding ice edge between June and September. The Arctic Calanus glacialis plays a key role in the pelagic lipid-based energy flux in Arctic shelf seas. It converts low energy carbohydrates and proteins into high energy lipids, which makes it extremely lipid-rich (>70% lipids), and a high- energy food item for higher trophic levels. C. glacialis optimally time its reproduction, growth and seasonal migration to the two algae blooms, the ice algae peak production in March -April and the phytoplankton peak during mid-summer.

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Источник: БИОЛОГИЧЕСКИЕ РЕСУРСЫ БЕЛОГО МОРЯ И ВНУТРЕННИХ ВОДОЕМОВ ЕВРОПЕЙСКОГО СЕВЕРА. Материалы XXVIII Международной конференции 5-8 октября 2009 г. г. Петрозаводск, Республика Карелия, Россия - Петрозаводск: КарНЦ РАН, 2009- 659 с.. 2009

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