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Dive into the research topics where Jeroen van der Kooij is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeroen van der Kooij.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

A Review of the Tools Used for Marine Monitoring in the UK: Combining Historic and Contemporary Methods with Modeling and Socioeconomics to Fulfill Legislative Needs and Scientific Ambitions

Tim P. Bean; Naomi Greenwood; Rachel E. Beckett; Lauren Biermann; John P. Bignell; Jan Brant; Gordon H. Copp; Michelle Devlin; Stephen Dye; Stephen W. Feist; Liam Fernand; Dean Foden; Kieran Hyder; Chris Jenkins; Jeroen van der Kooij; Silke Kröger; Sven Kupschus; Clare Leech; Kinson S. Leonard; Christopher P. Lynam; Brett P. Lyons; Thomas Maes; E.E. Manuel Nicolaus; Stephen Malcolm; Paul McIlwaine; Nathan D. Merchant; Lucille Paltriguera; David J. Pearce; Sophie G. Pitois; Paul Stebbing

Marine environmental monitoring is undertaken to provide evidence that environmental management targets are being met. Moreover, monitoring also provides context to marine science and over the last century has allowed development of a critical scientific understanding of the marine environment and the impacts that humans are having on it. The seas around the UK are currently monitored by targeted, impact-driven, programmes (e.g. fishery or pollution based monitoring) often using traditional techniques, many of which have not changed significantly since the early 1900s. The advent of a new wave of automated technology, in combination with changing political and economic circumstances, means that there is currently a strong drive to move towards a more refined, efficient, and effective way of monitoring. We describe the policy and scientific rationale for monitoring our seas, alongside a comprehensive description of the types of equipment and methodology currently used and the technologies that are likely to be used in the future. We contextualise the way new technologies and methodologies may impact monitoring and discuss how whole ecosystems models can give an integrated, comprehensive approach to impact assessment. Furthermore, we discuss how an understanding of the value of each data point is crucial to assess the true costs and benefits to society of a marine monitoring programme.


Biology Letters | 2018

Combined measurements of prey availability explain habitat selection in foraging seabirds

James J. Waggitt; P Cazenave; Leigh M. Howarth; Peter G.H. Evans; Jeroen van der Kooij; Jan Geert Hiddink

Understanding links between habitat characteristics and foraging efficiency helps predict how environmental changes influence populations of top predators. This study examines whether measurements of prey (clupeids) availability varied over stratification gradients, and determined if any of those measurements coincided with aggregations of foraging seabirds (common guillemot Uria aalge and Manx shearwater Puffinus puffinus) in the Celtic Sea, UK. The probability of encountering foraging seabirds was highest around fronts between mixed and stratified water. Prey were denser and shallower in mixed water, whilst encounters with prey were most frequent in stratified water. Therefore, no single measurement of increased prey availability coincided with the location of fronts. However, when considered in combination, overall prey availability was highest in these areas. These results show that top predators may select foraging habitats by trading-off several measurements of prey availability. By showing that top predators select areas where prey switch between behaviours, these results also identify a mechanism that could explain the wider importance of edge habitats for these taxa. As offshore developments (e.g. marine renewable energy installations) change patterns of stratification, their construction may have consequences on the foraging efficiency of seabirds.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2010

Thermal niche of Atlantic cod Gadus morhua: limits, tolerance and optima

David Righton; Ken Haste Andersen; Francis Neat; Vilhjalmur Thorsteinsson; Petur Steingrund; Henrik Svedäng; Kathrine Michalsen; Hans-Harald Hinrichsen; Victoria Bendall; Stefan Neuenfeldt; Peter J. Wright; Patrik Jonsson; Geir Huse; Jeroen van der Kooij; Henrik Mosegaard; Karin Hüssy; Julian D. Metcalfe


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2012

Anchovy population expansion in the North Sea

Pierre Petitgas; Juergen Alheit; Myron A. Peck; Kristina Raab; Xabier Irigoien; Martin Huret; Jeroen van der Kooij; Thomas Pohlmann; Carola Wagner; Iratxe Zarraonaindia; Mark Dickey-Collas


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2012

Investigating fine‐scale spatio‐temporal predator–prey patterns in dynamic marine ecosystems: a functional data analysis approach

Clare B. Embling; Janine Illian; Eric Armstrong; Jeroen van der Kooij; Jonathan Sharples; Kees Camphuysen; Beth E. Scott


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2007

Life under pressure: insights from electronic data-storage tags into cod swimbladder function

Jeroen van der Kooij; David Righton; Espen Strand; Kathrine Michalsen; Vilhjalmur Thorsteinsson; Henrik Svedäng; Francis Neat; Stefan Neuenfeldt


Fisheries Research | 2006

Perceptions of fish distribution, abundance and behaviour : Observations revealed by alternative survey strategies made by scientific and fishing vessels

Steven Mackinson; Jeroen van der Kooij


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2015

Nursery areas and recruitment variation of Northeast Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus)

Teunis Jansen; Kasper Kristensen; Jeroen van der Kooij; Søren Post; Andrew Campbell; Kjell Rong Utne; Pablo Carrera; Jan Arge Jacobsen; Asta Gudmundssdottir; Beatriz A. Roel; Emma M. C. Hatfield


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2012

Identification of marine fish egg predators using molecular probes

Clive Fox; Martin I. Taylor; Jeroen van der Kooij; Natasha Taylor; Stephen P. Milligan; Aitor Albaina; Sonia Pascoal; Delphine Lallias; Marjorie Maillard; Ewan Hunter


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2012

Sprat feeding behaviour, selective predation, and impact on plaice egg mortality

Antonio Plirú; Jeroen van der Kooij; Georg H. Engelhard; Clive Fox; Stephen P. Milligan; Ewan Hunter

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Ewan Hunter

Centre for Environment

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Henrik Svedäng

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Clive Fox

Scottish Association for Marine Science

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