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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Vogedes is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Vogedes.


Biology Letters | 2009

Diel vertical migration of Arctic zooplankton during the polar night

Jørgen Berge; Finlo Cottier; Øystein Varpe; Eva Leu; Janne E. Søreide; Ketil Eiane; Stig Falk-Petersen; Kate J Willis; Henrik Nygård; Daniel Vogedes; Collin Griffiths; Geir Johnsen; Dag Arne Lorentzen; Andrew S. Brierley

High-latitude environments show extreme seasonal variation in physical and biological variables. The classic paradigm of Arctic marine ecosystems holds that most biological processes slow down or cease during the polar night. One key process that is generally assumed to cease during winter is diel vertical migration (DVM) of zooplankton. DVM constitutes the largest synchronized movement of biomass on the planet, and is of paramount importance for marine ecosystem function and carbon cycling. Here we present acoustic data that demonstrate a synchronized DVM behaviour of zooplankton that continues throughout the Arctic winter, in both open and ice-covered waters. We argue that even during the polar night, DVM is regulated by diel variations in solar and lunar illumination, which are at intensities far below the threshold of human perception. We also demonstrate that winter DVM is stronger in open waters compared with ice-covered waters. This suggests that the biologically mediated vertical flux of carbon will increase if there is a continued retreat of the Arctic winter sea ice cover.


Polar Research | 2007

Little auks ( Alle alle ) breeding in a High Arctic fjord system: bimodal foraging strategies as a response to poor food quality?

Harald Steen; Daniel Vogedes; Fredrik Broms; Stig Falk-Petersen; Jørgen Berge

The foraging behaviour of little auks (Alle alle) in the Bjørndalen colony on the western coast of Spitsbergen was studied during the breeding season 2005. The duration of foraging trips and contents of gular pouches were analysed. Quantitative zooplankton samples procured in the vicinity of the colony facilitated a comparison between gular pouch contents and the availability of prey species. Zooplankton and gular pouch samples were all sampled within a time window of approximately one week. Using the Bray–Curtis similarity index, we determined that little auks in this colony have a bimodal foraging strategy consisting of long and short foraging trips with two corresponding distinct diets. Short trips are most likely to be centred on areas within the Isfjorden complex, whereas the birds are most likely to use the long trips (of typically more than 10 hours) to reach areas off the continental slope where they are able to feed selectively on large, energy-rich food items such as Calanus hyperboreus. This bimodal foraging strategy may be a response to the low availability of nutrientrich food close to the colony, which is insufficient to sustain both parents and chicks. Bimodal foraging trip strategies are well documented in many species in the Southern Ocean. This is the first study to show a similar feeding pattern in an Alcidae species in the Northern Hemisphere.


Current Biology | 2015

Unexpected Levels of Biological Activity during the Polar Night Offer New Perspectives on a Warming Arctic

Jørgen Berge; Malin Daase; Paul E. Renaud; William G. Ambrose; Gérald Darnis; Eva Leu; Jonathan H. Cohen; Geir Johnsen; Mark A. Moline; Finlo Cottier; Øystein Varpe; Natalia Shunatova; Piotr Balazy; Nathalie Morata; Jean-Charles Massabuau; Stig Falk-Petersen; Ksenia Kosobokova; Clara Jule Marie Hoppe; Jan Marcin Węsławski; Piotr Kuklinski; Joanna Legeżyńska; Daria Nikishina; Marine Cusa; Monika Kędra; Maria Włodarska-Kowalczuk; Daniel Vogedes; Lionel Camus; Damien Tran; Emma Michaud; Tove M. Gabrielsen

The current understanding of Arctic ecosystems is deeply rooted in the classical view of a bottom-up controlled system with strong physical forcing and seasonality in primary-production regimes. Consequently, the Arctic polar night is commonly disregarded as a time of year when biological activities are reduced to a minimum due to a reduced food supply. Here, based upon a multidisciplinary ecosystem-scale study from the polar night at 79°N, we present an entirely different view. Instead of an ecosystem that has entered a resting state, we document a system with high activity levels and biological interactions across most trophic levels. In some habitats, biological diversity and presence of juvenile stages were elevated in winter months compared to the more productive and sunlit periods. Ultimately, our results suggest a different perspective regarding ecosystem function that will be of importance for future environmental management and decision making, especially at a time when Arctic regions are experiencing accelerated environmental change [1].


Polar Biology | 2012

Potential misidentifications of two climate indicator species of the marine arctic ecosystem: Calanus glacialis and C. finmarchicus

Tove M. Gabrielsen; Benjamin Merkel; Janne E. Søreide; Emma Johansson-Karlsson; Allison Bailey; Daniel Vogedes; Henrik Nygård; Øystein Varpe; Jørgen Berge

Calanoid copepods of the genus Calanus represent an important, nutrient-rich food source for a multitude of Arctic marine organisms. Although morphologically very similar, their life histories and ecological roles differ. Because the distribution of Calanus glacialis and C. finmarchicus corresponds to Arctic and Atlantic water masses, respectively, they are regularly used as climate indicators. A correct identification of these species is therefore necessary in many ecological, environmental and climatological studies. In this study, we aimed at validating the traditionally used morphological characteristics (combining prosome length and copepodite stage) for separation of species of Calanus by using molecular tools (PCR–RFLP of the 16S mtDNA). A total of 418 specimens of copepodite stages CIV, CV and CVI(af) from three Arctic fjords have been identified both morphologically and genetically. We find that the morphological identification systematically overestimates the abundance of C. finmarchicus at the expense of C. glacialis. Hence, parts of the C. glacialis populations are found to be structurally smaller and the within population size range thus larger than previously assumed. Consequently, using the traditional morphological species delimitation poses a serious problem in the use of these two species as indicators of Atlantic versus Arctic water masses and thus as climatic indicators. Furthermore, it obscures our understanding of the life history differences between the two species and of their relative importance as food for a number of ecologically and economically important species in the Arctic.


Marine Biology Research | 2008

Vertical distribution of Calanus spp. and Metridia longa at four Arctic locations

Malin Daase; Ketil Eiane; Dag L. Aksnes; Daniel Vogedes

Abstract We investigated the vertical distribution of Calanus finmarchicus, C. glacialis, C. hyperboreus and Metridia longa at four locations around the archipelago of Svalbard in autumn. The older and larger copepodites of Calanus spp. were generally located deeper in the water column. Differences in vertical distribution between stations partly reflected a south–north gradient in developmental progress with higher abundance of older stages in the southern locations. The C. finmarchicus and M. longa observations were consistent with the hypothesis that the developmental stages distributed according to certain preferences for light intensity, and different optical properties at the four locations are likely to have affected the vertical distributions. Diel vertical migration was only observed for older developmental stages of M. longa while young stages of M. longa remained in deep waters both day and night. A mortality index indicated that non-migrating Calanus spp. suffered higher mortality than migrating M. longa.


Journal of Plankton Research | 2010

Lipid sac area as a proxy for individual lipid content of arctic calanoid copepods.

Daniel Vogedes; Øystein Varpe; Janne E. Søreide; Martin Graeve; Jørgen Berge; Stig Falk-Petersen

We present an accurate, fast, simple and non-destructive photographic method to estimate wax ester and lipid content in single individuals of the calanoid copepod genus Calanus and test this method against gas-chromatographic lipid measurements.


Marine Biology Research | 2014

Variability in Calanus spp. abundance on fine- to mesoscales in an Arctic fjord : implications for little auk feeding

Daniel Vogedes; Ketil Eiane; Anna S. Båtnes; Jørgen Berge

Abstract We studied the abundance of calanoid copepods of the genus Calanus in a high-resolution sampling grid located in the vicinity of a breeding colony of an avian Calanus predator, the little auk (Alle alle) in an Arctic fjord (Isfjorden, Svalbard) in July 2007. Within diving reach of little auks, all copepodite stages of C. finmarchicus, as well as stages CIII–CV of C. glacialis, were recorded in all 26 stations sampled. Spatial autocorrelation analysis was used to detect spatial heterogeneity (patches) in the distribution of Calanus spp. Positive spatial autocorrelation was detected on scales up to 1.2 km for C. finmarchicus stages CIII–CV and for C. glacialis CIV and CV, but was rarely detected for the younger stages. This suggests that the tendency to form patches varies with ontogeny in Calanus spp. At an adjacent little auk colony, the diet prey composition from 30 gular pouches of little auks returning from feeding trips was investigated. Calanus glacialis CIV and CV were numerically dominant in the prey samples, while C. finmarchicus CIV which was dominant in the net samples did not contribute to the little auk diet. This could suggest selective feeding, a detection of patches beyond the scale of our survey, feeding beyond the sampling area or a combination of these factors. Large Calanus abundance differences within the sampling grid underline the necessity of a proper choice of grid size, in this case 2 km between stations.


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2018

Pelagic food-webs in a changing Arctic: a trait-based perspective suggests a mode of resilience

Paul E. Renaud; Malin Daase; Neil S. Banas; Tove M. Gabrielsen; Janne E. Søreide; Øystein Varpe; Finlo Cottier; Stig Falk-Petersen; Claudia Halsband; Daniel Vogedes; Kristin Heggland; Jørgen Berge

Arctic marine ecosystems support fisheries of significant and increasing economic and nutritional value. Commercial stocks are sustained by pelagic food webs with relatively few keystone taxa mediating energy transfer to higher trophic levels, and it remains largely unknown how these taxa will be affected by changing climate and the influx of boreal taxa. Calanus species store large quantities of lipids, making these zooplankton a critical link in marine food-webs. The Arctic Calanus species are usually larger and, importantly, have been suggested to contain disproportionately larger lipid stores than their boreal congeners. Continued climate warming and subsequent changes in primary production regimes have been predicted to lead to a shift from the larger, lipid-rich Arctic species, Calanus glacialis and Calanus hyperboreus, toward the smaller, boreal Calanus finmarchicus in the European Arctic, with negative consequences for top predators. Our data show that lipid content is closely related to body size for all three species, i.e. is not a species-specific trait, and that there is considerable overlap in size between C. finmarchicus and C. glacialis. A trait-based life-history model was used to examine an idealized scenario where, in a changed Arctic with a longer period of primary production, C. glacialis- and C. hyperboreus-like copepods are indeed replaced by C. finmarchicus-like individuals, whether through competition, plasticity, hybridization, or evolution. However, the model finds that transfer of energy from primary producers to higher predators may actually be more efficient in this future scenario, because of the changes in generation length and population turnover rate that accompany the body-size shifts. These findings suggest that Arctic marine food webs may be more resilient to climate-related shifts in the Calanus complex than previously assumed.


IFAC-PapersOnLine | 2016

Ice-tethered observational platforms in the Arctic Ocean pack ice

Jørgen Berge; Maxime Geoffroy; Geir Johnsen; Finlo Cottier; Bodil A. Bluhm; Daniel Vogedes


Limnology and Oceanography | 2017

Recruitment of benthic invertebrates in high Arctic fjords: Relation to temperature, depth, and season

Kirstin S. Meyer; Andrew K. Sweetman; Piotr Kuklinski; Peter Leopold; Daniel Vogedes; Jørgen Berge; Colin Griffiths; Craig M. Young; Paul E. Renaud

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Jørgen Berge

University Centre in Svalbard

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Øystein Varpe

University Centre in Svalbard

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Janne E. Søreide

University Centre in Svalbard

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Tove M. Gabrielsen

University Centre in Svalbard

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Eva Leu

Norwegian Polar Institute

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Geir Johnsen

University of California

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Ketil Eiane

University Centre in Svalbard

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Paul E. Renaud

University Centre in Svalbard

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