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Dive into the research topics where Kasper Lambert Johansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Kasper Lambert Johansen.


Polar Biology | 2012

Inter-breeding movements of little auks Alle alle reveal a key post-breeding staging area in the Greenland Sea

Anders Mosbech; Kasper Lambert Johansen; Nikolaj I. Bech; Peter Lyngs; Ann M. A. Harding; Carsten Egevang; Richard A. Phillips; Jérôme Fort

Seabirds are important components in marine ecosystems. However, knowledge of their ecology and spatial distribution during the non-breeding season is poor. More investigations during this critical period are required urgently, as marine environments are expected to be profoundly affected by climate change and human activities, with both direct and indirect consequences for marine top predators. Here, we studied the distribution of little auks (Alle alle), one of the most abundant seabird species worldwide. We found that after the breeding season, birds from East Greenland quickly travelled north-east to stay for several weeks within a restricted area in the Greenland Sea. Activity patterns indicated that flying behaviour was much reduced during this period, suggesting that this is the primary moulting region for little auks. Birds then performed a southerly migration to overwinter off Newfoundland. These preliminary results provide important information for the conservation of this species and emphasise the need for further studies at a larger spatial scale.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2011

Light-induced bird strikes on vessels in Southwest Greenland.

Flemming Merkel; Kasper Lambert Johansen

Light-induced bird strikes are known to occur when vessels navigate during darkness in icy waters using powerful searchlight. In Southwest Greenland, which is important internationally for wintering seabirds, we collected reports of incidents of bird strikes over 2-3 winters (2006-2009) from navy vessels, cargo vessels and trawlers (total n=19). Forty-one incidents were reported: mainly close to land (<4 km, 78%), but one as far offshore as 205 km. Up to 88 birds were reported killed in a single incident. All occurred between 5p.m. and 6a.m. and significantly more birds were involved when visibility was poor (snow) rather than moderate or good. Among five seabird species reported, the common eider (Somateria mollissima) accounted for 95% of the bird casualties. Based on spatial analyses of data on vessel traffic intensity and common eider density we are able to predict areas with high risk of bird strikes in Southwest Greenland.


Journal of danish archaeology | 2006

Settlement and Land Use at the Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition in Southern Scandinavia

Kasper Lambert Johansen

Abstract This contribution is a critical survey and discussion of patterns of settlement and land use at the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Southern Scandinavia. The Ertebolle Culture (EBK) and the earliest stage of the Funnel Beaker Culture, early Neolithic I (EN I), are thoroughly examined, leading to a comparison between the two periods. It is found that our view on the settlement system of the EBK needs revision. In recent years, the EBK has been characterised according to the model of complex hunters. Large groups that live a sedentary life on big year-round base camps have been anticipated, whereas the smaller settlements have been perceived as seasonal extraction camps, exploited by task-groups radiating from a base camp. This model is considered here to be insufficient. Instead, it is proposed that EBK settlement comprised a number of small groups rotating between sites on a seasonal basis within a confined territory, but perhaps periodically aggregating at key localities. It is concluded that...


Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2017

Small birds, big effects: the little auk (Alle alle) transforms high Arctic ecosystems

Ivan González-Bergonzoni; Kasper Lambert Johansen; Anders Mosbech; Frank Landkildehus; Erik Jeppesen; Thomas A. Davidson

In some arctic areas, marine-derived nutrients (MDN) resulting from fish migrations fuel freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems, increasing primary production and biodiversity. Less is known, however, about the role of seabird-MDN in shaping ecosystems. Here, we examine how the most abundant seabird in the North Atlantic, the little auk (Alle alle), alters freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems around the North Water Polynya (NOW) in Greenland. We compare stable isotope ratios (δ15N and δ13C) of freshwater and terrestrial biota, terrestrial vegetation indices and physical–chemical properties, productivity and community structure of fresh waters in catchments with and without little auk colonies. The presence of colonies profoundly alters freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems by providing nutrients and massively enhancing primary production. Based on elevated δ15N in MDN, we estimate that MDN fuels more than 85% of terrestrial and aquatic biomass in bird influenced systems. Furthermore, by using different proxies of bird impact (colony distance, algal δ15N) it is possible to identify a gradient in ecosystem response to increasing bird impact. Little auk impact acidifies the freshwater systems, reducing taxonomic richness of macroinvertebrates and truncating food webs. These results demonstrate that the little auk acts as an ecosystem engineer, transforming ecosystems across a vast region of Northwest Greenland.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2018

Present and past dynamics of Inughuit resource spaces

Janne Flora; Kasper Lambert Johansen; Bjarne Grønnow; Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen; Anders Mosbech

Information from a collaborative GPS tracking project, Piniariarneq, involving 17 occupational hunters from Qaanaaq and Savissivik, Northwest Greenland, is used to explore the resource spaces of hunters in Avanersuaq today. By comparison with historical records from the time of the Thule Trading Station and the decades following its closure, we reveal a marked variability in resource spaces over time. It is argued that the dynamics of resources and resource spaces in Thule are not underlain by animal distribution and migration patterns, or changes in weather and sea ice conditions alone; but also by economic opportunities, human mobility, settlement patterns, particular historical events and trajectories, and not least by economic and political interests developed outside the region.


Polar Research | 2017

Estimating little auk (Alle alle) breeding density and chick-feeding rate using video surveillance

Anders Mosbech; Peter Lyngs; Kasper Lambert Johansen

ABSTRACT High Arctic ecosystems are under change and need to be monitored. We studied little auks (Alle alle), the most abundant seabird in the North Atlantic, in their main breeding area in the North Water Polynya region of High-Arctic north-west Greenland. We developed a method for estimating breeding density and chick-feeding rate based on video surveillance. As the nests of little auks are secluded between rocks and cannot be directly observed, the method rests on detailed recording of feeding events, when parent birds arrive from the sea with filled gular pouches and disappear into the scree to feed their chicks, supplemented with recording of fledging and pre-fledging behaviour of chicks outside the nesting holes. We installed video cameras in two study plots during the late chick-rearing and fledging periods 2 – 11 August 2012 and 5 – 12 August 2013, and the method proved useful for estimating the density of active nests immediately prior to fledging (which corresponds roughly to productivity of fledglings/m2). The densities of active nests for the two plots in 2012 and 2013 ranged between 1.06 and 1.63 nests/m2, and an average of 9.1 feeds/chick/day (n = 8 pairs, 3 × 24 h, 219 feedings) was recorded for this late stage of the chick-rearing period. Our video surveillance method has advantages over the mark–resight methods and other techniques used to monitor little auk colonies.


Diversity and Distributions | 2013

Multicolony tracking reveals potential threats to little auks wintering in the North Atlantic from marine pollution and shrinking sea ice cover

Jérôme Fort; Børge Moe; Hallvard Strøm; David Grémillet; Jorg Welcker; Jannik Schultner; Kurt Jerstad; Kasper Lambert Johansen; Richard A. Phillips; Anders Mosbech


Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | 2004

Spatial patterns of social organization in the Early Bronze Age of South Scandinavia

Kasper Lambert Johansen; Steffen Terp Laursen; Mads Kähler Holst


Biological Conservation | 2016

Migration and wintering of a declining seabird, the thick-billed murre Uria lomvia, on an ocean basin scale : Conservation implications

Morten Frederiksen; Sébastien Descamps; Kjell Einar Erikstad; Anthony J. Gaston; H. Grant Gilchrist; David Grémillet; Kasper Lambert Johansen; Yann Kolbeinsson; Jannie Fries Linnebjerg; Mark L. Mallory; Laura McFarlane Tranquilla; Flemming Merkel; William A. Montevecchi; Anders Mosbech; Tone Kristin Reiertsen; Gregory J. Robertson; Harald Steen; Hallvard Strøm; Thorkell L. Thórarinsson


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2018

On the crucial importance of a small bird: The ecosystem services of the little auk (Alle alle) population in Northwest Greenland in a long-term perspective

Anders Mosbech; Kasper Lambert Johansen; Thomas A. Davidson; Martin Appelt; Bjarne Grønnow; Christine Cuyler; Peter Lyngs; Janne Flora

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Janne Flora

University of Copenhagen

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Hallvard Strøm

Norwegian Polar Institute

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