Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sanne Kjellerup is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sanne Kjellerup.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

No barrier to emergence of bathyal king crabs on the Antarctic shelf

Richard B. Aronson; Kathryn E. Smith; Stephanie C. Vos; James B. McClintock; Margaret O. Amsler; Per-Olav Moksnes; Daniel S. Ellis; Jeffrey W. Kaeli; Hanumant Singh; John Bailey; Jessica C. Schiferl; Robert van Woesik; Michael A. Martin; Brittan V. Steffel; Michelle E. Deal; Steven M. Lazarus; Jonathan N. Havenhand; Rasmus Swalethorp; Sanne Kjellerup; Sven Thatje

Significance For tens of millions of years, cold conditions have excluded shell-crushing fish and crustaceans from the continental shelf surrounding Antarctica. Rapid warming is now allowing predatory crustaceans to return. Our study of the continental slope off the western Antarctic Peninsula showed that abundant, predatory king crabs comprise a reproductively viable population at 841- to 2,266-m depth. Depth profiles of temperature, salinity, habitat structure, food availability, and predators indicate that there are no barriers to prevent king crabs from moving upward onto the outer shelf at 400–550 m. A cold-water barrier above 200 m could be breached within the next few decades. Emergence of king crabs on the shelf could have catastrophic consequences for the unique seafloor communities of Antarctica. Cold-water conditions have excluded durophagous (skeleton-breaking) predators from the Antarctic seafloor for millions of years. Rapidly warming seas off the western Antarctic Peninsula could now facilitate their return to the continental shelf, with profound consequences for the endemic fauna. Among the likely first arrivals are king crabs (Lithodidae), which were discovered recently on the adjacent continental slope. During the austral summer of 2010‒2011, we used underwater imagery to survey a slope-dwelling population of the lithodid Paralomis birsteini off Marguerite Bay, western Antarctic Peninsula for environmental or trophic impediments to shoreward expansion. The population density averaged ∼4.5 individuals × 1,000 m−2 within a depth range of 1,100‒1,500 m (overall observed depth range 841–2,266 m). Images of juveniles, discarded molts, and precopulatory behavior, as well as gravid females in a trapping study, suggested a reproductively viable population on the slope. At the time of the survey, there was no thermal barrier to prevent the lithodids from expanding upward and emerging on the outer shelf (400- to 550-m depth); however, near-surface temperatures remained too cold for them to survive in inner-shelf and coastal environments (<200 m). Ambient salinity, composition of the substrate, and the depth distribution of potential predators likewise indicated no barriers to expansion of lithodids onto the outer shelf. Primary food resources for lithodids—echinoderms and mollusks—were abundant on the upper slope (550–800 m) and outer shelf. As sea temperatures continue to rise, lithodids will likely play an increasingly important role in the trophic structure of subtidal communities closer to shore.


Marine Biology | 2014

Live discrimination of Calanus glacialis and C. finmarchicus females: can we trust phenological differences?

Torkel Gissel Nielsen; Sanne Kjellerup; Irina Smolina; Galice Hoarau; Penelope K. Lindeque


Marine Biology | 2014

Feeding opportunities of larval and juvenile cod (Gadus morhua) in a Greenlandic fjord: temporal and spatial linkages between cod and their preferred prey

Rasmus Swalethorp; Sanne Kjellerup; Evandro Malanski; Peter Munk; Torkel Gissel Nielsen


Polar Biology | 2014

Population dynamics and production of the small copepod Oithona spp. in a subarctic fjord of West Greenland

Sara Zamora-Terol; Sanne Kjellerup; Rasmus Swalethorp; Enric Saiz; Torkel Gissel Nielsen


Journal of Plankton Research | 2014

The mystery of Microsetella: combination of sac- and broadcast-spawning in an Arctic fjord

Marja Koski; Rasmus Swalethorp; Sanne Kjellerup; Torkel Gissel Nielsen


Marine Mammal Science | 2013

Geographic, seasonal, and diurnal surface behavior of harbor porpoises

Jonas Teilmann; Casper T. Christiansen; Sanne Kjellerup; Rune Dietz; Gösta Nachman


Journal of Plankton Research | 2016

Calanus finmarchicus egg production at its northern border

Eva Friis Møller; Magnus Bohr; Sanne Kjellerup; Marie Maar; Malene Møhl; Rasmus Swalethorp; Torkel Gissel Nielsen


Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene | 2015

Meso- and macro-zooplankton community structure of the Amundsen Sea Polynya, Antarctica (Summer 2010–2011)

Stephanie E. Wilson; Rasmus Swalethorp; Sanne Kjellerup; Megan A. Wolverton; Hugh W. Ducklow; Patricia L. Yager


Progress in Oceanography | 2019

Microzooplankton distribution in the Amundsen Sea Polynya (Antarctica) during an extensive Phaeocystis antarctica bloom

Rasmus Swalethorp; Julie Dinasquet; Ramiro Logares; Stefan Bertilsson; Sanne Kjellerup; Anders K. Krabberød; Per-Olav Moksnes; Torkel Gissel Nielsen; Lasse Riemann


Archive | 2013

Mesozooplankton abundance data from the fjord branch Kapisigdlit located in the Godthaabsfjord system, West Greenland, 2010

Rasmus Swalethorp; Sanne Kjellerup; Torkel Gissel Nielsen

Collaboration


Dive into the Sanne Kjellerup's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rasmus Swalethorp

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Torkel Gissel Nielsen

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Torkel Gissel Nielsen

Technical University of Denmark

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Benni Winding Hansen

Marine Biological Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge